期刊
NEW MEDIA & SOCIETY
卷 25, 期 5, 页码 1043-1064出版社
SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
DOI: 10.1177/14614448211016316
关键词
Information sharing; longitudinal analysis; privacy concerns; privacy paradox; structural equation modeling
Through a longitudinal study on a representative sample of the German population, this research found that there is a connection between individuals' concerns about online privacy and their information sharing behavior and attitudes, but the long-term effects of privacy concerns on information sharing and attitudes are not significant.
The privacy paradox states that people's concerns about online privacy are unrelated to their online sharing of personal information. On the basis of a representative sample of the German population, which includes 1,403 respondents interviewed at three waves separated by 6 months, we investigate the privacy paradox from a longitudinal perspective. Using a cross-lagged panel model with random intercepts, we differentiate between-person relations from within-person effects. Results revealed that people who were more concerned about their online privacy than others also shared slightly less personal information and had substantially more negative attitudes toward information sharing (between-person level). People who were more concerned than usual also shared slightly less information than usual (within-person level). We found no long-term effects of privacy concerns on information sharing or attitudes 6 months later. The results provide further evidence against the privacy paradox, but more research is needed to better understand potential causal relations.
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