MISQ Archivist
Avoidance of Information
Technology Threats: A Theoretical Perspective
Huigang Liang and
Yajiong Xue
Abstract
This paper describes the development of technology threat avoidance
theory (TTAT), which explains individual IT users’ behavior of
avoiding the threat of malicious information technologies. We
articulate that avoidance and adoption are two qualitatively
different phenomena and contend that technology acceptance theories
provide a valuable, but incomplete understanding, of users’ IT
threat avoidance behavior. Drawing from cybernetic theory and coping
theory, TTAT delineates the avoidance behavior as a dynamic positive
feedback loop in which users go through two cognitive processes,
threat appraisal and coping appraisal, to decide how to cope with IT
threats. In the threat appraisal, users will perceive an IT threat
if they believe that they are susceptible to malicious IT and that
the negative consequences are severe. The threat perception leads to
coping appraisal, in which users assess the degree to which the IT
threat can be avoided by taking safeguarding measures based on
perceived effectiveness and costs of the safeguarding measure and
self-efficacy of taking the safeguarding measure. TTAT posits that
users are motivated to avoid malicious IT when they perceive a
threat and believe that the threat is avoidable by taking
safeguarding measures; if users believe that the threat cannot be
fully avoided by taking safeguarding measures, they would engage in
emotion-focused coping. Integrating process theory and variance
theory, TTAT enhances our understanding of human behavior under IT
threats and makes an important contribution to IT security research
and practice.
Keywords:
Technology threat avoidance theory, cybernetics,
coping, malicious IT, virtuous IT, safeguarding measure, threat,
susceptibility, severity, avoidability, effectiveness, costs,
self-efficacy