2010
DOI: 10.1016/j.clsr.2010.07.001
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Profiling the mobile customer – Privacy concerns when behavioural advertisers target mobile phones – Part I

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Cited by 32 publications
(22 citation statements)
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“…Recently, studies indicated that there is an increasing consumer concern over privacy in the context of real time behavioral advertising and tacking technologies such as cookies [34]. The Internet advertising firms Double Click and Avenue A, software firm Intuit and others have faced lawsuits for using cookies to target advertising.…”
Section: Privacy and Data Securitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Recently, studies indicated that there is an increasing consumer concern over privacy in the context of real time behavioral advertising and tacking technologies such as cookies [34]. The Internet advertising firms Double Click and Avenue A, software firm Intuit and others have faced lawsuits for using cookies to target advertising.…”
Section: Privacy and Data Securitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Cleff (2007) and King and Jessen (2010) suggest that in order to ensure successful mobile advertising, and to provide more location-specific and personalised mobile advertisements, marketers need to profile consumers more precisely. This will allow for the creation of profiles, which could define and analyse consumers at any given time.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It is a legislative challenge to maximize economic potential of emerging mobile technologies like LBAs while providing adequate consumer privacy and data protection. Previous studies find that regulatory protection of personal data will increase consumer trust and usage of mobile advertising (King & Jessen, 2010), while neglecting consumers' privacy concerns is likely to cause distrust of using locationaware services and jeopardize their future diffusion (Xu et al, 2011). However, emerging technologies like LBAs usually progress at a fast rate when the development of related policies and regulations lag behind (Lin, 2012a;Cleff, 2010).…”
Section: Government/regulationmentioning
confidence: 98%