Stage-oe-small.jpg

Inproceedings3627: Unterschied zwischen den Versionen

Aus Aifbportal
Wechseln zu:Navigation, Suche
(Die Seite wurde neu angelegt: „{{Publikation Erster Autor |ErsterAutorNachname=Thiebes |ErsterAutorVorname=Scott }} {{Publikation Author |Rank=2 |Author=Kalle Lyytinen }} {{Publikation Author …“)
 
Zeile 5: Zeile 5:
 
{{Publikation Author
 
{{Publikation Author
 
|Rank=2
 
|Rank=2
|Author=Kalle Lyytinen  
+
|Author=Kalle Lyytinen
 
}}
 
}}
 
{{Publikation Author
 
{{Publikation Author
Zeile 18: Zeile 18:
 
|Booktitle=Proceedings of the Pre-ICIS Workshop on Information Security and Privacy
 
|Booktitle=Proceedings of the Pre-ICIS Workshop on Information Security and Privacy
 
|Pages=1-8
 
|Pages=1-8
|Organization=Association for Information Systems (AIS)  
+
|Organization=Association for Information Systems (AIS)
|Publisher=n.a.
+
|Publisher=AIS
 
}}
 
}}
 
{{Publikation Details
 
{{Publikation Details

Version vom 9. August 2018, 09:45 Uhr


Individuals' Willingness to Share Private Genome Data: Towards a Non-Personal Privacy Calculus


Individuals' Willingness to Share Private Genome Data: Towards a Non-Personal Privacy Calculus



Published: 2017 Dezember

Buchtitel: Proceedings of the Pre-ICIS Workshop on Information Security and Privacy
Seiten: 1-8
Verlag: AIS
Organisation: Association for Information Systems (AIS)

Referierte Veröffentlichung

BibTeX

Kurzfassung
Notwithstanding the potential personal and societal benefits of genomics, large scale genome data analyses bear novel information privacy risks for individual genome data donors and their relatives. Extant research on individuals’ willingness to share their private genome data has largely focused on eliciting individual motivating and discouraging factors. Little is known about the causal relationships between such factors and what drives individuals’ willingness to share their genome data. Drawing on the privacy calculus, we develop a model of individuals’ willingness to share their genome data. Specifically, we introduce a notion of social distance into the privacy calculus and conceptualize benefits and information privacy risks as a second-order construct consisting of benefits and respectively risks for oneself, close others, and distant others.



Forschungsgruppe

Critical Information Infrastructures


Forschungsgebiet