4.5 Article

Understanding people's intention to use facial recognition services: the roles of network externality and privacy cynicism

Journal

INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY & PEOPLE
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

EMERALD GROUP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1108/ITP-10-2021-0817

Keywords

Facial recognition services (FRS); Network externality; Privacy cynicism; Cognition-affect-conation (CAC) pattern; Structural equation model

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This study examines the factors influencing the intention to use facial recognition services (FRS) using the cognition-affect-conation pattern. It finds that FRS use intention is directly influenced by satisfaction and privacy cynicism. Satisfaction is affected by cognitive factors related to network externalities, while privacy cynicism is influenced by perceived privacy risk. Resistance to change moderates the relationship between privacy cynicism and FRS use intention.
PurposeBased on the cognition-affect-conation pattern, this study explores the factors that affect the intention to use facial recognition services (FRS). The study adopts the driving factor perspective to examine how network externalities influence FRS use intention through the mediating role of satisfaction and the barrier factor perspective to analyze how perceived privacy risk affects FRS use intention through the mediating role of privacy cynicism.Design/methodology/approachThe data collected from 478 Chinese FRS users are analyzed via partial least squares-based structural equation modeling (PLS-SEM).FindingsThe study produces the following results. (1) FRS use intention is motivated directly by the positive affective factor of satisfaction and the negative affective factor of privacy cynicism. (2) Satisfaction is affected by cognitive factors related to network externalities. Perceived complementarity and perceived compatibility, two indirect network externalities, positively affect satisfaction, whereas perceived critical mass, a direct network externality, does not significantly affect satisfaction. In addition, perceived privacy risk generates privacy cynicism. (3) Resistance to change positively moderates the relationship between privacy cynicism and intention to use FRS.Originality/valueThis study extends knowledge on people's use of FRS by exploring affect- and cognitive-based factors and finding that the affect-based factors (satisfaction and privacy cynicism) play fully mediating roles in the relationship between the cognitive-based factors and use intention. This study also expands the cognitive boundaries of FRS use by exploring the functional condition between affect-based factors and use intention, that is, the moderating role of resistance to use.

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