Journal Article10.1177/20539517241232629
Inequalities in privacy cynicism: An intersectional analysis of agency constraints
Christian Pieter Hoffmann,Christoph Lutz,Giulia Ranzini +2 more
- 15 Feb 2024
7
TL;DR: The article enriches the field of privacy research by linking the traditionally individual-focused and psychological dimensions of privacy with critical surveillance studies and by proposing potential interventions to mitigate privacy cynicism.
read more
Abstract: A growing body of research highlights a trend toward widespread attitudes of privacy cynicism, apathy and resignation among Internet users. In this work, we extend these discussions by concentrating on the concept of user agency. Specifically, we examine how five types of structural constraints—interpersonal, cultural, technological, economic and political—restrict user agency and contribute to the prevalence of privacy cynicism as a common response. Drawing on critical data studies and adopting an intersectional lens, we demonstrate how these constraints disproportionately impact various social groups unequally, leading to a disparate distribution of agency and privacy cynicism. Furthermore, we contend that the sense of powerlessness engendered by excessive constraints on user agency can, in turn, exacerbate user vulnerability to such constraints, potentially initiating a vicious cycle of disempowerment. The article enriches the field of privacy research by linking the traditionally individual-focused and psychological dimensions of privacy with critical surveillance studies and by proposing potential interventions to mitigate privacy cynicism.
read more
Chat with Paper
AI Agents for this Paper
Find similar papers on Google Scholar, PubMed and Arxiv
Write a critical review of this paper
Analyze citations of this paper to find unaddressed research gaps
Citations
The Online Privacy Divide: Testing Resource and Identity Explanations for Racial/Ethnic Differences in Privacy Concerns and Privacy Management Behaviors on Social Media
Laurent H. Wang,Miriam J. Metzger +1 more
TL;DR: This study examines racial/ethnic differences in social media privacy concerns and management behaviors, finding that Latinx and Asian users report higher concerns and employ different management strategies than White users, with resource and identity-based explanations varying by group.
2
Differences in access to privacy information can partly explain digital inequalities in privacy literacy and self-efficacy
Yannic Meier,Nicole C. Krämer +1 more
Privacy resignation, apathy, and cynicism: Introduction to a special theme
Nora A Draper,Christian Pieter Hoffmann,Christoph Lutz,Giulia Ranzini,Joseph Turow +4 more
- 06 Aug 2024
TL;DR: This special theme explores digital resignation, privacy cynicism, and apathy, examining how individuals feel powerless against institutional forces shaping the information environment, and proposes future research directions to address these concerns.
Latent privacy management profiles on algorithmic social media: cross-cultural insights into privacy protection motivations and management behaviors
Hyunjin Kang,Tingting Yang,Nazira Banu,Jeeyun Oh +3 more
TL;DR: This study identifies four distinct user profiles on social media, based on privacy management patterns, and explores the role of privacy self-efficacy in predicting profile membership across cultures, using a cross-national survey of 2,078 users in the US and Singapore.
References
Trading on the Unknown: Scenarios for the Future Value of Data
TL;DR: The practices of extensive data collection among sharing economy platforms are explored, highlighting how the unknown future value of big data creates an ethical problem for a fair exchange relationship between companies and users.
7
Sharenting in the perspective of islamic education
Fitria Fauziah Hasanah
- 19 Dec 2019
TL;DR: In this article, a set of best practices for parents to consider when sharing about children online in the perspevtive of Islamic education is discussed. But, the lack of legal regulations regarding the protection of children's privacy online was also pointed out.
The contextual role of privacy concerns in online political participation
TL;DR: In this article , a survey of German Internet users found that social media use exerts a strong positive effect on political participation, especially lower-threshold forms of participation, and that privacy concerns relate positively to higher-level forms of political participation.
6
Nevertheless, It Persists
German Neubaum,Daniel S. Lane +1 more
TL;DR: In this article , the authors argue that message persistence (i.e., the temporal extent to which messages can be accessed by users) is a central affordance of many social media, which affects not only users' likelihood of political expression, but also self-effects in terms of users feeling socially committed to their expressed views.
2