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Journal Article

Citation

Ayaburi EW. Inform. Technol. People 2023; 36(1): 95-114.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2023, Emerald Group Publishing)

DOI

10.1108/ITP-04-2021-0262

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

PURPOSE The study aims to empirically understand individuals' tendency to disclose private information online following different forms of data breach (i.e. reversible and irreversible victimization).

DESIGN/METHODOLOGY/APPROACH Survey methodology is applied to measure the perception of victims of data breaches on key indicators of information disclosure.

FINDINGS Analysis of responses from 309 victims of data breaches show that while victims' irreversible data breach victimization experience influences both dimensions of privacy concerns, reversible data breach victimization experiences influenced only peer privacy concerns (PPCs). Furthermore, only institutional privacy concerns impacted online disclosure and fully mediate the relationship between victimization experience and online disclosure. Research limitations/implications The findings contribute to the privacy literature by expanding the dimension of victimization and considering their differential effect on privacy concerns. Additionally, the study uncovers the efficacy of privacy dimension on privacy recalibration following a data breach announcement. Practical implications For practice, the results provide insights for managers on how to manage customer restitution after a data breach. Management of the process of privacy recalibration should not be homogenous but be based on degree of consequence. Social implications This research provides deeper understanding of how the ascendancy of privacy breaches affect privacy management. The findings illuminate why the increasing trend in online activities is observed.

ORIGINALITY/VALUE The study is the first to identify two dimensions of data breach victimization experience based on the breach level index (BLI). The two dimensions of victimization (i.e. reversible and irreversible privacy victimizations) were used to understand individuals' tendency to disclose private information online.


Language: en

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