Standing in the Footprint: Including the Self in the Privacy Debate and Policy Development (Report)
Journal of Consumer Affairs 2009, Fall, 43, 3
-
- 2,99 €
-
- 2,99 €
Publisher Description
Personal information can be considered a shared good, since in many cases this information is accessed, used and distributed by more than just the individual. Thus, how personal information is defined or characterized and why it is valued differs based on whether or not one is the person whom the information describes. This article shows how current debates that influence policy and regulation are largely based on economic and social frameworks, points out policy issues that are evident due to the absence of a "self-perspective," and suggests how inclusion of the "self" might lead to more effective policy in the future. **********
Consumers' Understanding of Privacy Rules in the Marketplace (Bits, BRIEFS AND Applications) (Survey)
2008
Drivers of Participation in Collaborative Consumption Ventures
2016
Impact of Privacy and Confidentiality on Valuation: An International Perspective.
2010
Qualitative Consumer Research
2017
Transparency in Business
2023
The Routledge Companion to Marketing and Society
2022
Diet Choice and the Role of Time Preference.
2003
The Effects of Advertising, Social Influences, And Self-Efficacy on Adolescent Tobacco Use and Alcohol Consumption (Essay)
2010
The Influence of Moral Philosophy on Retail Salespeople's Ethical Perceptions (Research in the Consumer's Interest)
2004
Health Information Consumers Can't Or Don't Want to Use (Editorial POSTLUDE)
2009
Ivan L. Preston: 1931-2011 (Obituary)
2011
Consumer Self-Confidence in Searching for Information (Survey)
2009