The Role of Online Trading Communities in
Managing Internet Auction Fraud
Cecil Eng Huang Chua, Jonathan
Wareham, and Daniel Robey
Abstract
Internet auctions demonstrate that advances in information
technologies can create more efficient venues of exchange between
large numbers of traders. However, the growth of Internet
auctions has been accompanied by a corresponding growth in Internet
auction fraud. Much extant research on Internet auction fraud
in the information systems literature is conducted at the individual
level of analysis, thereby limiting its focus to the choices of
individual traders or trading dyads. The criminology
literature, in contrast, recognizes that social and community
factors are equally important influences on the perpetration and
prevention of crime. We employ social disorganization theory
as a lens to explain how online auction communities address auction
fraud and how those communities interact with formal authorities.
We show how communities may defy, coexist, or cooperate with the
formal authority of auction houses. These observations are
supported by a qualitative analysis of three cases of online
anti-crime communities operating in different auction product
categories. Our analysis extends aspects of social
disorganization theory to online communities. We conclude that
community-based clan control may operate in concert with
authority-based formal control to manage the problem of Internet
auction fraud more effectively.
Keywords: Auction
fraud, e-commerce, authority, communities, clan control, informal
social control