Values, personal information privacy, and regulatory approaches
Communications of the ACM
Information Privacy: Corporate Management and National Regulation
Organization Science
Web Privacy with P3p
Understanding and Designing for Intermediated Information Tasks in India
IEEE Pervasive Computing
A Trusted Approach to E-Commerce
SDM '08 Proceedings of the 5th VLDB workshop on Secure Data Management
Regulating india's digital public cultures: a grey or differently regulated area
UI-HCII'07 Proceedings of the 2nd international conference on Usability and internationalization
Challenges and novelties while using mobile phones as ICT devices for Indian masses: short paper
Proceedings of the 4th ACM Workshop on Networked Systems for Developing Regions
Policy framework for security and privacy management
IBM Journal of Research and Development
Proceedings of the Sixth Annual Workshop on Cyber Security and Information Intelligence Research
TRUST'11 Proceedings of the 4th international conference on Trust and trustworthy computing
E-commerce: protecting purchaser privacy to enforce trust
Electronic Commerce Research
Home is safer than the cloud!: privacy concerns for consumer cloud storage
Proceedings of the Seventh Symposium on Usable Privacy and Security
Online social networks in a post-Soviet state: how Hungarians protect and share on Facebook
Proceedings of the 2012 iConference
Privacy in mobile technology for personal healthcare
ACM Computing Surveys (CSUR)
Globalization and Data Privacy: An Exploratory Study
International Journal of Information Security and Privacy
Privacy policies and national culture on the internet
Information Systems Frontiers
A cross-cultural framework for protecting user privacy in online social media
Proceedings of the 22nd international conference on World Wide Web companion
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In recent years, numerous surveys have been conducted to assess attitudes about privacy in the United States, Australia, Canada, and the European Union. Very little information has been published about privacy attitudes in India. As India is becoming a leader in business process outsourcing, increasing amounts of personal information from other countries is flowing into India. Questions have been raised about the ability of Indian companies to adequately protect this information. We conducted an exploratory study to gain an initial understanding of attitudes about privacy among the Indian high tech workforce. We carried out a written survey and one-on-one interviews to assess the level of awareness about privacy-related issues and concern about privacy among a sample of educated people in India. Our results demonstrate an overall lack of awareness of privacy issues and less concern about privacy in India than has been found in similar studies conducted in the United States.