| Literature DB >> 33267485 |
Lili Nemec Zlatolas1, Tatjana Welzer1, Marko Hölbl1, Marjan Heričko1, Aida Kamišalić1.
Abstract
Online Social Networks are used widely, raising new issues in terms of privacy, trust, and self-disclosure. For a better understanding of these issues for Facebook users, a model was built that includes privacy value, privacy risk, trust, privacy control, privacy concerns, and self-disclosure. A total of 602 respondents participated in an online survey, and structural equation modeling was used to evaluate the model. The findings indicate significant relationships between the constructs in this study. The model from our study contributes new knowledge to privacy issues, trust and self-disclosure on Online Social Networks for other researchers or developers of online social networks.Entities:
Keywords: Facebook; model; online social networks; privacy; self-disclosure; trust
Year: 2019 PMID: 33267485 PMCID: PMC7515301 DOI: 10.3390/e21080772
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Entropy (Basel) ISSN: 1099-4300 Impact factor: 2.524
Presentation of models on privacy, trust, and self-disclosure
| Independent Variables | Mediator Variables | Dependent Variables | Tested on Users Of | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Privacy awareness, Privacy social norm, Perceived effectiveness of privacy policy, Perceived effectiveness of privacy seal |
| Financial and healthcare websites, electronic commerce, and OSNs | [ | |
| Resource vulnerability, Threat severity, | Cost of not using privacy controls, Social norm, Attitude, Perceived behavioral control |
| [ | |
| Privacy experience, |
| Behavioral intention | websites | [ |
|
| Continuance intention | OSNs | [ | |
| Extroversion, Perceived critical mass, | Attitude |
| OSNs | [ |
| Perceived likelihood, Perceived damage, Privacy enjoyment |
|
| OSNs | [ |
| Privacy policy (Notice, Choice, Access, Security, Enforcement) |
|
| Internet | [ |
a Named Privacy value in the proposed model from this paper. b Named Self-disclosure in the proposed model from this paper.
Figure 1The Online Social Networks research model of privacy issues, trust, and self-disclosure.
Sample of demographics (n = 602).
| Variable | Analysis Results |
|---|---|
| Gender | Male 44.0% |
| Finished education | Less than high school 1.5% |
| Age | M 26.73 SD 8.21 |
| Number of friends on Facebook | M 441.06 SD 393.54 |
| Percentage of Facebook Friends whom the user doesn’t know in person | M 11.42% SD 19.26% |
| Average Facebook use per day | 0–10 min per day 13.0% |
| Experience with Internet use (7-point Likert scale) | M 6.35 SD 0.99 |
| Experience with Facebook use (7-point Likert scale) | M 5.88 SD 1.25 |
Measurement of variables.
| Constructs | Code | Items | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Privacy risk | PR1 | I think giving personal information on Facebook would be risky. | [ |
| PR2 | Providing my personal information to Facebook would involve many unexpected issues. | ||
| PR3 | Facebook may use my personal information inappropriately. | ||
| Privacy value | PV1 | To me, keeping my privacy online is the most important thing. | [ |
| PV2 | I see greater importance in keeping personal information private compared to others. | ||
| PV3 | I am more concerned with potential threats to my personal privacy compared to others. | ||
| Trust in Facebook | TR1 | Facebook is a trustworthy OSN. | [ |
| TR2 | Facebook has a good reputation. | ||
| TR3 | I can conduct my privacy on Facebook. | ||
| TR4 | I will recommend that others use Facebook. | ||
| Self-disclosure | SD1 | My profile on Facebook is filled with details. * | [ |
| SD2 | My profile on Facebook tells a lot about me. * | ||
| SD3 | On Facebook, I disclose a lot of information about me. * | ||
| SD4 | I am prepared to provide personal information on OSN. * | ||
| SD5 | I am forced to submit personal information on OSNs. | ||
| Privacy control | PCt1 | I think I have control over who can access my personal information that is collected by Facebook. | [ |
| PCt2 | I think I control who has access to my personal information on Facebook. | ||
| PCt3 | I think I have control over how Facebook uses personal information. | ||
| PCt4 | I think I can control my personal information which I provide to Facebook. | ||
| Privacy concerns | PCs1 | It upsets me when I have to put personal information on Facebook. | [ |
| PCs2 | I am concerned that too much personal information about me is being collected by OSNs. | ||
| PCs3 | I’m concerned that my personal information could be accessed by unauthorized people. | ||
| PCs4 | I am concerned that there may be misuse of the information I submit on Facebook. | ||
| PCs5 | I am concerned when I have to submit information on OSNs. |
* Reverse coded item.
Factor loadings and Cronbach’s alpha.
| Item | Factor Loading | Constructs | No. of Items | Cronbach’s α |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| PR1 | 0.824 | Privacy risk | 3 | 0.800 |
| PR2 | 0.852 | |||
| PR3 | 0.603 | |||
| PV2 | 0.452 | Privacy value | 2 | 0.772 |
| PV3 | 0.484 | |||
| TR1 | 0.843 | Trust in Facebook | 3 | 0.824 |
| TR2 | 0.726 | |||
| TR3 | 0.770 | |||
| SD1 | 0.775 | Self-disclosure | 4 | 0.851 |
| SD2 | 0.858 | |||
| SD3 | 0.789 | |||
| SD4 | 0.608 | |||
| PCt1 | 0.987 | Privacy control | 2 | 0.788 |
| PCt2 | 0.683 | |||
| PCs1 | 0.756 | Privacy concerns | 5 | 0.901 |
| PCs2 | 0.902 | |||
| PCs3 | 0.755 | |||
| PCs4 | 0.714 | |||
| PCs5 | 0.834 |
The measurement model fit test results fit.
| Notation | Recommended Value | Measurement Model |
|---|---|---|
| GFI | ≥0.90 | 0.903 |
| CFI | ≥0.90 | 0.923 |
| NFI | ≥0.90 | 0.903 |
| RMSEA | ≤0.10 | 0.074 |
Composite Reliability (CR), Average Variance Extracted (AVE), and factor correlations matrix.
| CR | AVE | Privacy | Privacy | Trust in Facebook | Self-Disclosure | Privacy Control | Privacy Concerns | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| 0.881 | 0.587 |
| |||||
|
| 0.864 | 0.642 | 0.314 |
| ||||
|
| 0.893 | 0.615 | 0.130 | 0.003 |
| |||
|
| 0.910 | 0.594 | 0.047 | 0.041 | 0.062 |
| ||
|
| 0.883 | 0.689 | 0.020 | 0.003 | 0.228 | 0.001 |
| |
|
| 0.944 | 0.654 | 0.401 | 0.215 | 0.157 | 0.015 | 0.031 |
|
The bold diagonal elements represent AVE’s square root.
Figure 2The path coefficient analysis.
The results of the testing of hypotheses.
| H | Path | Standardized Coefficient β | T-Statistic | The Result | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| H1a | PR | - | TR | −0.413 *** | −6.851 | Accepted |
| H1b | PR | - | PCs | 0.627 *** | 7.711 | Accepted |
| H2 | PV | - | PCs | 0.231 *** | 4.118 | Accepted |
| H3a | TR | - | SD | −0.284 *** | −5.183 | Accepted |
| H3b | TR | - | PCt | 0.355 *** | 7.528 | Accepted |
| H3c | TR | - | PCs | −0.274 *** | −5.525 | Accepted |
*** p < 0.001.