Building consumer trust online
Communications of the ACM
Analysis of internet users' level of online privacy concerns
Social Science Computer Review - The digital imperative of social sciences in the new millenium
Understanding Internet usage: a social-cognitive approach to uses and gratifications
Social Science Computer Review
Information Privacy: Corporate Management and National Regulation
Organization Science
Social Consequences of Internet Use: Access, Involvement, and Interaction
Social Consequences of Internet Use: Access, Involvement, and Interaction
Assessing new cell phone text and video services
Telecommunications Policy
An index-based privacy preserving service trigger in context-aware computing environments
Expert Systems with Applications: An International Journal
Katz out of the bag: the broader privacy ramifications of using facebook
Proceedings of the 73rd ASIS&T Annual Meeting on Navigating Streams in an Information Ecosystem - Volume 47
Privacy policies for shared content in social network sites
The VLDB Journal — The International Journal on Very Large Data Bases
Journal of Management Information Systems
Journal of Management Information Systems
Researching Personal Information on the Public Web: Methods and Ethics
Social Science Computer Review
Are privacy concerns a turn-off?: engagement and privacy in social networks
Proceedings of the Eighth Symposium on Usable Privacy and Security
Participatory personal data: An emerging research challenge for the information sciences
Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology
Theories in online information privacy research: A critical review and an integrated framework
Decision Support Systems
International Journal of Technology and Human Interaction
Journal of Global Information Management
A multi-level model of individual information privacy beliefs
Electronic Commerce Research and Applications
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With the rapid diffusion of the Internet, researchers, policy makers, and users have raised concerns about online privacy, although few studies have integrated aspects of usage with psychological and attitudinal aspects of privacy. This study develops a model involving gender, generalized self-efficacy, psychological need for privacy, Internet use experience, Internet use fluency, and beliefs in privacy rights as potential influences on online privacy concerns. Survey responses from 413 college students were analyzed by bivariate correlations, hierarchical regression, and structural equation modeling. Regression results showed that beliefs in privacy rights and a psychological need for privacy were the main influences on online privacy concerns. The proposed structural model was not well supported by the data, but a revised model, linking self-efficacy with psychological need for privacy and indicating indirect influences of Internet experience and fluency on online privacy concerns about privacy through beliefs in privacy rights, was supported by the data. © 2007 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.