TRUSTe: an online privacy seal program
Communications of the ACM
Information Systems Research
Research Commentary: The Next Wave of Nomadic Computing
Information Systems Research
Building trust in online auction markets through an economic incentive mechanism
Decision Support Systems
A taxonomy of indoor and outdoor positioning techniques for mobile location services
ACM SIGecom Exchanges - Mobile commerce
Evolution of mobile location-based services
Communications of the ACM - Mobile computing opportunities and challenges
Predicting e-services adoption: a perceived risk facets perspective
International Journal of Human-Computer Studies - Special issue on HCI and MIS
Internet Users' Information Privacy Concerns (IUIPC): The Construct, the Scale, and a Causal Model
Information Systems Research
Personalization and Context Management
User Modeling and User-Adapted Interaction
An Extended Privacy Calculus Model for E-Commerce Transactions
Information Systems Research
Journal of Management Information Systems
Communications of the ACM - Urban sensing: out of the woods
Location-Based Services: Back to the Future
IEEE Pervasive Computing
Overcoming Online Information Privacy Concerns: An Information-Processing Theory Approach
Journal of Management Information Systems
Journal of Management Information Systems
Journal of Management Information Systems
Interoperability of E-Government Information Systems: Issues of Identification and Data Sharing
Journal of Management Information Systems
Smart mobile media services: consumer intention model
Proceedings of the 8th International Conference on Advances in Mobile Computing and Multimedia
The online privacy paradox: a social representations perspective
CHI '11 Extended Abstracts on Human Factors in Computing Systems
Privacy-aware collection of aggregate spatial data
Data & Knowledge Engineering
Journal of Management Information Systems
Proceedings of the 14th Annual International Conference on Electronic Commerce
Location-based crowdsourcing of hyperlocal news: dimensions of participation preferences
Proceedings of the 17th ACM international conference on Supporting group work
Theories in online information privacy research: A critical review and an integrated framework
Decision Support Systems
Online information product design: The influence of product integration on brand extension
Decision Support Systems
An empirical examination of the determinants of mobile purchase
Personal and Ubiquitous Computing
Drivers and Inhibitors of Mobile-Payment Adoption by Smartphone Users
International Journal of E-Business Research
An empirical examination of user adoption of location-based services
Electronic Commerce Research
International Journal of Electronic Commerce
Disclosure Intention of Location-Related Information in Location-Based Social Network Services
International Journal of Electronic Commerce
Examining continuous usage of location-based services from the perspective of perceived justice
Information Systems Frontiers
The influence of user affect in online information disclosure
The Journal of Strategic Information Systems
Making Decisions about Privacy: Information Disclosure in Context-Aware Recommender Systems
ACM Transactions on Interactive Intelligent Systems (TiiS)
Factors affecting privacy disclosure on social network sites: an integrated model
Electronic Commerce Research
Privacy practices in collaborative environments: a study of emergency department staff
Proceedings of the 17th ACM conference on Computer supported cooperative work & social computing
Explaining customers' willingness to use mobile network-based pay-as-you-drive insurances
International Journal of Mobile Communications
Information disclosure on mobile devices: Re-examining privacy calculus with actual user behavior
International Journal of Human-Computer Studies
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Location-based services (LBS) use positioning technologies to provide individual users with reachability and accessibility that would otherwise not be available in the conventional commercial realm. While LBS confer greater connectivity and personalization on consumers, they also threaten users' information privacy through granular tracking of their preferences, behaviors, and identity. To address privacy concerns in the LBS context, this study extends the privacy calculus model to explore the role of information delivery mechanisms (pull and push) in the efficacy of three privacy intervention approaches (compensation, industry self-regulation, and government regulation) in influencing individual privacy decision making. The research model was tested using data gathered from 528 respondents through a quasi-experimental survey method. Structural equations modeling using partial least squares validated the instrument and the proposed model. Results suggest that the effects of the three privacy intervention approaches on an individual's privacy calculus vary based on the type of information delivery mechanism (pull and push). Results suggest that providing financial compensation for push-based LBS is more important than it is for pull-based LBS. Moreover, this study shows that privacy advocates and government legislators should not treat all types of LBS as undifferentiated but could instead specifically target certain types of services.