4.7 Article

Privacy controls as an information source to reduce data poisoning in artificial intelligence-powered personalization

Journal

JOURNAL OF BUSINESS RESEARCH
Volume 152, Issue -, Pages 144-153

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.jbusres.2022.07.045

Keywords

Protection motivation theory; Privacy control; Vulnerability; Self-efficacy; Falsifying information

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The latest advances in data-driven marketing have made consumers more vulnerable and some consumers resort to falsifying information as a response. However, the topic of falsification is under-researched. Based on a within-subject experiment, the results show that privacy controls have an indirect effect on falsification through vulnerability and self-efficacy.
The latest advances in data-driven marketing, such as real-time personalization, have increasingly made con -sumers more vulnerable. In response, some consumers deliberately falsify information in order to redress the balance of power, a practice that constitutes a serious threat to the digital economy. The topic of falsification is still largely under-researched in information systems and marketing. Based on protection motivation theory, the author conceptualizes privacy controls as a source of information and the falsification of information as a coping response, with vulnerability representing the threat appraisal mechanism and self-efficacy the coping appraisal mechanism. Through a within-subject experiment (n = 207), the results of the mediation analysis for repeated measures show that the effect of privacy controls as a source of information on the falsification of information is fully mediated by vulnerability and self-efficacy. The author provides insights for managers regarding the sig-nificant trade-off between reducing consumer vulnerability and maintaining the usefulness of the data.

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