Online privacy as legal safeguard: the relationship among consumer, online portal, and privacy policies

Several surveys attest to growing public concerns regarding privacy, aggravated by the diffusion of information technologies. A policy of self-regulation that allows individual companies to implement self-designed privacy statements is prevalent in the United States. These statements rarely provide specific privacy guarantees that personal information will be kept confidential. This study provides a discourse analysis of such privacy statements to determine their overall efficacy as a policy measure. The in-depth analysis of privacy statements revealed that they offer little protection to the consumer, instead serving to authorize business practices which allow companies to profit from consumer data. Using public good theory as a foundation, policy implications are discussed.

[1]  Anthony D. Miyazaki,et al.  Internet Privacy and Security: An Examination of Online Retailer Disclosures , 2000 .

[2]  Paola Benassi,et al.  TRUSTe: an online privacy seal program , 1999, CACM.

[3]  Badie N. Farah,et al.  E-Commerce and Privacy: Conflict and Opportunity , 2001 .

[4]  Rob Reilly,et al.  Conceptual Foundations of Privacy: Looking Backward Before Stepping Forward , 1999 .

[5]  Lorrie Faith Cranor,et al.  Internet privacy , 1999, CACM.

[6]  K. Sheehan,et al.  Dimensions of Privacy Concern among Online Consumers , 2000 .

[7]  M. Graber,et al.  Reading level of privacy policies on Internet health Web sites. , 2002, The Journal of family practice.

[8]  Anthony D. Miyazaki,et al.  Consumer Perceptions of Privacy and Security Risks for Online Shopping , 2001 .

[9]  Lorrie Faith Cranor,et al.  The platform for privacy preferences , 1999, CACM.

[10]  Jan Fernback,et al.  Online Privacy and Consumer Protection: An Analysis of Portal Privacy Statements , 2005 .

[11]  Lawrence Lessig,et al.  Code and Other Laws of Cyberspace , 1999 .

[12]  J. Horrigan,et al.  Trust and privacy online: Why Americans want to rewrite the rules , 2000 .

[13]  Linda A. Wood,et al.  Doing Discourse Analysis: Methods for Studying Action in Talk and Text , 2000 .

[14]  Randy Ryker,et al.  Online Privacy Policies: An Assessment of the Fortune E-50 , 2002, J. Comput. Inf. Syst..

[15]  Alan Mckenna,et al.  Playing Fair with Consumer Privacy in the Global On-line Environment , 2001 .

[16]  Jeremy Harris Lipschultz,et al.  Free Expression in the Age of the Internet: Social and Legal Boundaries , 2018 .

[17]  J. Rubenfeld The Right of Privacy , 1989 .

[18]  Cees J. Hamelink,et al.  The ethics of cyberspace , 2001 .