Money makes you reveal more: Consequences of monetary cues on preferential disclosure of personal information

With continuous growth in information aggregation and dissemination, studies on privacy preferences are important to understand what makes people reveal information about them. Previous studies have demonstrated that short-term gains and possible monetary rewards make people risk disclosing informat...

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Main Authors: Sumitava eMukherjee, Jaison A Manjaly, Maithilee eNargundkar
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2013-11-01
Series:Frontiers in Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2013.00839/full
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spelling doaj-790fff99a93c490fa839bf94ca30fb152020-11-24T23:24:08ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Psychology1664-10782013-11-01410.3389/fpsyg.2013.0083962614Money makes you reveal more: Consequences of monetary cues on preferential disclosure of personal informationSumitava eMukherjee0Jaison A Manjaly1Maithilee eNargundkar2Indian Institute of Technology GandhinagarIndian Institute of Technology GandhinagarIndian Institute of Technology GandhinagarWith continuous growth in information aggregation and dissemination, studies on privacy preferences are important to understand what makes people reveal information about them. Previous studies have demonstrated that short-term gains and possible monetary rewards make people risk disclosing information. Given the malleability of privacy preferences and the ubiquitous monetary cues in daily lives, we measured the contextual effect of reminding people about money on their privacy disclosure preferences. In experiment 1, we found that priming money increased willingness to disclose their personal information that could be shared with an online shopping website. Beyond stated willingness, experiment 2 tested whether priming money increases propensity for actually giving out personal information. Across both experiments, we found that priming money increases both the reported willingness and the actual disclosure of personal information. Our results imply that not only do short-term rewards make people trade-off personal security and privacy, but also mere exposure to money increases self-disclosure.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2013.00839/fullPrivacyprimingmoneyPreferencesSelf Disclosure
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sumitava eMukherjee
Jaison A Manjaly
Maithilee eNargundkar
spellingShingle Sumitava eMukherjee
Jaison A Manjaly
Maithilee eNargundkar
Money makes you reveal more: Consequences of monetary cues on preferential disclosure of personal information
Frontiers in Psychology
Privacy
priming
money
Preferences
Self Disclosure
author_facet Sumitava eMukherjee
Jaison A Manjaly
Maithilee eNargundkar
author_sort Sumitava eMukherjee
title Money makes you reveal more: Consequences of monetary cues on preferential disclosure of personal information
title_short Money makes you reveal more: Consequences of monetary cues on preferential disclosure of personal information
title_full Money makes you reveal more: Consequences of monetary cues on preferential disclosure of personal information
title_fullStr Money makes you reveal more: Consequences of monetary cues on preferential disclosure of personal information
title_full_unstemmed Money makes you reveal more: Consequences of monetary cues on preferential disclosure of personal information
title_sort money makes you reveal more: consequences of monetary cues on preferential disclosure of personal information
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Psychology
issn 1664-1078
publishDate 2013-11-01
description With continuous growth in information aggregation and dissemination, studies on privacy preferences are important to understand what makes people reveal information about them. Previous studies have demonstrated that short-term gains and possible monetary rewards make people risk disclosing information. Given the malleability of privacy preferences and the ubiquitous monetary cues in daily lives, we measured the contextual effect of reminding people about money on their privacy disclosure preferences. In experiment 1, we found that priming money increased willingness to disclose their personal information that could be shared with an online shopping website. Beyond stated willingness, experiment 2 tested whether priming money increases propensity for actually giving out personal information. Across both experiments, we found that priming money increases both the reported willingness and the actual disclosure of personal information. Our results imply that not only do short-term rewards make people trade-off personal security and privacy, but also mere exposure to money increases self-disclosure.
topic Privacy
priming
money
Preferences
Self Disclosure
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2013.00839/full
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