Concern for Information Privacy: A Cross-Nation Study of the United Kingdom and South Africa

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Authors

Da Veiga, Adele
Ophoff, Jacques

Issue Date

2020

Type

Preprint Article

Language

en

Keywords

information privacy , concern , expectation , South Africa , United Kingdom

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Abstract

Individuals have differing levels of information privacy concern, formed by their expectations and the confidence they have that organisations meet this in practice. Variance in privacy laws and national factors may also play a role. This study analyses individuals’ information privacy expectation and confidence across two nations, the United Kingdom and South Africa, through a sur-vey of 1463 respondents. The findings indicate that the expectation for privacy in both countries are very high. However, numerous significant differences exist between expectations and confidence when examining privacy principles. The overall results for both countries show that there is a gap in terms of the privacy expectations of respondents compared to the confidence they have in whether organisations are meeting their expectations. Governments, regulators, and organisations with an online presence need to consider individuals’ expectations and ensure that controls that meet regulatory requirements, as well as expectations, are in place.

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Citation

Da Veiga, A., Ophoff, J. (2020). Concern for Information Privacy: A Cross-Nation Study of the United Kingdom and South Africa. In: Clarke, N., Furnell, S. (eds) Human Aspects of Information Security and Assurance. HAISA 2020. IFIP Advances in Information and Communication Technology, vol 593. Springer, Cham https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-57404-8_2

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Springer, Cham

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DOI

ISSN

1868-4238

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