Title
An economic analysis of user-privacy options in ad-supported services
Abstract
We analyze the value to e-commerce website operators of offering privacy options to users, e.g., of allowing users to opt out of ad targeting. In particular, we assume that site operators have some control over the cost that a privacy option imposes on users and ask when it is to their advantage to make such costs low. We consider both the case of a single site and the case of multiple sites that compete both for users who value privacy highly and for users who value it less. One of our main results in the case of a single site is that, under normally distributed utilities, if a privacy-sensitive user is worth at least $\sqrt{2} - 1$ times as much to advertisers as a privacy-insensitive user, the site operator should strive to make the cost of a privacy option as low as possible. In the case of multiple sites, we show how a Prisoner's-Dilemma situation can arise: In the equilibrium in which both sites are obliged to offer a privacy option at minimal cost, both sites obtain lower revenue than they would if they colluded and neither offered a privacy option.
Year
DOI
Venue
2012
10.1007/978-3-642-35311-6_3
workshop on internet and network economics
Keywords
DocType
Volume
privacy-insensitive user,value privacy,single site,prisoner s-dilemma situation,site operator,privacy option,user-privacy option,ad-supported service,lower revenue,privacy-sensitive user,minimal cost,multiple site,economic analysis
Conference
abs/1208.0383
Citations 
PageRank 
References 
0
0.34
8
Authors
3
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Joan Feigenbaum14714711.33
Michael Mitzenmacher27386730.89
Georgios Zervas339049.61