Title
International Differences In Information Privacy Concerns: A Global Survey Of Consumers
Abstract
We examine three possible explanations for differences in Internet privacy concerns revealed by national regulation: (1) These differences reflect and are related to differences in cultural values described by other research; (2) these differences reflect differences in Internet experience; or (3) they reflect differences in the desires of political institutions without reflecting underlying differences in privacy preferences. Using a sample of Internet users from 38 countries matched against the Internet population of the United States, we find support for (1) and (2), suggesting the need for localized privacy policies. Privacy concerns decline with Internet experience. Controlling for experience, cultural values were associated with differences in privacy concerns. These cultural differences are mediated by regulatory differences, although new cultural differences emerge when differences in regulation are harmonized. Differences in regulation reflect but also shape country differences. Consumers in countries with sectoral regulation have less desire for more privacy regulation.
Year
DOI
Venue
2004
10.1080/01972240490507956
INFORMATION SOCIETY
Keywords
Field
DocType
consumer attitudes, cultural values, database marketing, information privacy, Internet, national regulation
Population,Advertising,Sociology,Public relations,Database marketing,Privacy policy,Cultural values,Cultural diversity,Information privacy,Politics,The Internet
Journal
Volume
Issue
ISSN
20
5
0197-2243
Citations 
PageRank 
References 
107
4.55
8
Authors
4
Search Limit
100107
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Steven Bellman149053.64
Eric J. Johnson234337.71
Stephen J. Kobrin31074.55
Gerald L. Lohse41160193.20