Start Date
11-12-2016 12:00 AM
Description
Privacy breaches are increasing - in frequency and magnitude. Within the current digital climate, as more sensitive and confidential information is being moved to the digital space, it is clear that privacy breaches will continue to grow as will the potential damage to an organization’s trust and reputation. Although privacy regulations continue to dominate as the solution, this paper aims to conceptually explore (using control and justice theories) if organizations whose information privacy protection approach is driven more heavily by values of justice, rather than values of control, experience less privacy incidents and increased levels of trust.
Recommended Citation
Lyons, Valerie Rosanna; Van Der Werff, Lisa; and Lynn, Theo, "Ethics as Pacemaker - Regulating the Heart of the Privacy-Trust Relationship between Organisations, their Consumers and their Employees : A conceptual model, and future framework." (2016). ICIS 2016 Proceedings. 3.
https://aisel.aisnet.org/icis2016/ISSecurity/Presentations/3
Ethics as Pacemaker - Regulating the Heart of the Privacy-Trust Relationship between Organisations, their Consumers and their Employees : A conceptual model, and future framework.
Privacy breaches are increasing - in frequency and magnitude. Within the current digital climate, as more sensitive and confidential information is being moved to the digital space, it is clear that privacy breaches will continue to grow as will the potential damage to an organization’s trust and reputation. Although privacy regulations continue to dominate as the solution, this paper aims to conceptually explore (using control and justice theories) if organizations whose information privacy protection approach is driven more heavily by values of justice, rather than values of control, experience less privacy incidents and increased levels of trust.