2018
DOI: 10.1177/0002764218787026
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Privacy Attitudes and Concerns in the Digital Lives of Older Adults: Westin’s Privacy Attitude Typology Revisited

Abstract: There is a growing literature on teenage and young adult users' attitudes toward and concerns about online privacy, yet little is known about older adults and their unique experiences. As older adults join the digital world in growing numbers, we need to gain a better understanding of how they experience and navigate online privacy. This paper fills this research gap by examining 40 in-depth interviews with older adults (65+) living in East York, Toronto. We found Westin's typology to be a useful starting poin… Show more

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Cited by 65 publications
(49 citation statements)
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“…Between 1979 and 2001, Westin randomly selected U.S. citizens to gauge privacy attitudes across a variety of domains, including health information, consumer and e-commerce [29], and identified three key privacy categories: pragmatists, fundamentalists or unconcerned [24]. Results from Westin’s “Privacy On and Off the Internet” survey revealed that 25% of those surveyed were fundamentalists, 55% were pragmatists, and 20% were unconcerned [24,30].…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Between 1979 and 2001, Westin randomly selected U.S. citizens to gauge privacy attitudes across a variety of domains, including health information, consumer and e-commerce [29], and identified three key privacy categories: pragmatists, fundamentalists or unconcerned [24]. Results from Westin’s “Privacy On and Off the Internet” survey revealed that 25% of those surveyed were fundamentalists, 55% were pragmatists, and 20% were unconcerned [24,30].…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Individual choice is a chimera in a politicoeconomic milieu in which the news media, the most significant data intermediaries shaping public understandings of data and technologies, are institutionally and ideologically bound to the same governments and corporations that profit from data projects and technology services (Sen, 2016; Yu, 2017). Similarly, the construction of human beings as “privacy pragmatists” (Kumaraguru & Cranor, 2005) who weigh their loss of privacy against the benefits of using digital technologies or participating in data projects is simplistic and reductionist (Elueze & Quan-Haase, 2018; Hoofnagle & Urban, 2014). Our study shows that such “pragmatism” isn’t individualistic and doesn’t exist in a political and ethical vacuum: It is produced by a social structure that privileges technology adoption and participation in projects such as Aadhaar and SCS while concealing how they compromise privacy and leave citizens susceptible to surveillance.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Consequently, it is individuals, instead of governments or corporations, who become the “locus of privacy decision”—a framework which “may not only fail to protect individual privacy, but also bias the privacy calculus of the larger society by reducing the level of privacy available to all” (Baruh & Popescu, 2017, p. 585). Belief in “privacy pragmatists” persists, even though empirical studies have repeatedly showed that many people are often unaware of how technology services compromise their privacy and many citizens want more regulations on the activities of governments and corporations providing such services (Elueze & Quan-Haase, 2018; Hoofnagle & Urban, 2014).…”
Section: Sociology Of Big Datamentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Privacy concerns are important enough to individuals participating in online activities for researchers to study (Downing, 2016;Elueze & Quan-Haase, 2018;Ifenthaler & Schumacher, 2016;Ivanovic, et al, 2013;Martin, Rice, & Martin, 2016;Quinn, 2016). Many prior findings suggest that people hold many different attitudes about privacy (Dennen, 2015;Elueze & Quan-Haase, 2018;Quinn, 2016). Martin, Rice, & Martin (2016) did find some commonly held opinions about privacy among IT professionals.…”
Section: Privacymentioning
confidence: 99%