Beyond lazy; external locus of control as an alternative explanation for the privacy paradox
Whelan, Eoin ; Lang, Michael ; Butler, Martin
Whelan, Eoin
Lang, Michael
Butler, Martin
Citations
Altmetric:
Publication Type
Journal article with impact factor
Editor
Supervisor
Publication Year
2024
Journal
Internet Research
Book
Publication Volume
Publication Issue
Publication Begin page
Publication End page
Publication NUmber of pages
Collections
Abstract
Purpose – The privacy paradox refers to the situation where users of online services continue to disclose personal information even when they are concerned about their privacy. One recent study of Facebook users published in Internet Research concludes that laziness contributes to the privacy paradox. The purpose of this study is to challenge the laziness explanation. To do so, we adopt a cognitive dispositions perspective and examine how a person’s external locus of control influences the privacy paradox, beyond the trait of laziness. Design/methodology/approach – A mixed method approach is adopted. We first develop a research model which hypothesises the moderating effects of both laziness and external locus of control on privacy issues. We quantitatively test the research model through a two-phase survey of 463 Facebook users using the Hayes PROCESS macro. We then conduct a qualitative study to verify and develop the findings from the quantitative phase. Findings – The privacy paradox holds true. The findings confirm the significant influence of external locus of control on the privacy paradox. While our quantitative findings suggest laziness does not affect the association between privacy concerns and self-disclosure, our qualitative data does provide some support for the laziness explanation. Originality/value – Our study extends existing research by showing that a person’s external locus of control provides a stronger explanation for the privacy paradox than the laziness perspective. As such, this study further reveals the boundary conditions on which the privacy paradox exists for some users of social networking sites, but not others. Our study also suggests cognitive dissonance coping strategies, which are largely absent in prior investigations, may influence the privacy paradox
Research Projects
Organizational Units
Journal Issue
Keywords
Privacy Paradox, Social Networking Sites, Self-disclosure, Locus of Control, Laziness