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MISQ Archivist
The Value of Privacy Assurance: An
Exploratory Field Experiment
Kai-Lung Hui, Hock Hai Teo, and
Sang-Yong Tom Lee
Abstract
This paper reports the results of an exploratory field experiment
in Singapore that assessed the values of two types of privacy
assurance privacy statements and privacy seals. We
collaborated with a local firm to host the experiment on its website
with its real domain name, and the subjects were not informed of the
experiment. Hence, it provided a field observation of the
subjects' behavioral responses toward the privacy assurances.
We found that (1) the existence of a privacy statement induced more
subjects to disclose their personal information but that of a
privacy seal did not; (2) monetary incentive had a positive
influence on disclosure; and (3) information request had a negative
influence on disclosure. These results were robust in other
specifications that used alternative measures for some of our model
variables. We discuss this study in relation to the extant
privacy literature, most of which employs surveys and laboratory
experiments for data collection, and draw related managerial
implications.
Keywords: Privacy assurance, field experiment, privacy statement,
privacy seal, monetary incentive, information request
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