Litcius/Paper detail

Awareness, Intention, (In)Action: Individuals’ Reactions to Data Breaches

Peter Mayer, Yixin Zou, Byron Lowens, Hunter A. Dyer, Khue Le, Florian Schaub, Adam J. Aviv

2023ACM Transactions on Computer-Human Interaction24 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Data breaches are prevalent. We provide novel insights into individuals’ awareness, perception, and responses to breaches that affect them through two online surveys: a main survey ( n = 413) in which we presented participants with up to three breaches that affected them, and a follow-up survey ( n = 108) in which we investigated whether the main study participants followed through with their intentions to act. Overall, 73% of participants were affected by at least one breach, but participants were unaware of 74% of breaches affecting them. Although some reported intention to take action, most participants believed the breach would not impact them. We also found a sizable intention-behavior gap. Participants did not follow through with their intention when they were apathetic about breaches, considered potential costs, forgot, or felt resigned about taking action. Our findings suggest that breached organizations should be held accountable for more proactively informing and protecting affected consumers.

Topics & Concepts

Action (physics)Data breachPerceptionAffect (linguistics)PsychologySocial psychologyInternet privacySurvey data collectionComputer scienceQuantum mechanicsCommunicationMathematicsPhysicsStatisticsNeuroscienceInformation and Cyber SecurityPrivacy, Security, and Data ProtectionSpam and Phishing Detection