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Pizza over privacy? A paradox of the digital age

A new study by SIEPR鈥檚 Susan Athey shows a disconnect between what people say they want and what they actually do when it comes to protecting privacy.

People say they want to protect their personal information, but new research shows privacy tends to take a backseat to convenience and can easily get tossed out the window for a reward as simple as free pizza.

The  鈥 co-authored by Susan Athey, a senior fellow at the 好色App Institute for Economic Policy Research 鈥 provides real-life evidence of a digital privacy paradox: a disconnect between stated privacy preferences and actual privacy choices. And it serves policymakers with some food for thought about how to regulate data sharing without creating more hassles for consumers.

鈥淕enerally, people don鈥檛 seem to be willing to take expensive actions or even very small actions to preserve their privacy,鈥 Athey said. 鈥淓ven though, if you ask them, they express frustration, unhappiness or dislike of losing their privacy, they tend not to make choices that correspond to those preferences.鈥

Sketch with examples comparing privacy to pizza
Illustration by Fyza Parviz

In highlighting the distortions in consumer behavior regarding privacy, the findings suggest that safeguards, such as the widespread 鈥淣otice and Choice鈥 policies under the Privacy Act of 1974, are not enough.

Athey and her co-authors, Christian Catalini and Catherine Tucker of MIT, clinched a unique opportunity to empirically explore the privacy paradox when MIT launched a project in 2014 to encourage experimentation with Bitcoin by MIT undergraduates.

The researchers examined how 3,108 undergraduates played out their privacy preferences while choosing an online wallet to store and manage the digital currency. Along with the Bitcoin distribution, the students鈥 privacy preferences were also being measured.

Regardless of varying levels of privacy features, the order of the four wallet options presented upon sign-up seemed to drive many of the participants鈥 decisions, even when the choice contrasted with their stated privacy preferences, the study found.

For instance, when the bank-like wallet offering the most privacy protection from the public was listed first, 78 percent of the students selected it. When it was listed second or lower, only 65 percent chose it.

And it made little difference when researchers provided students with more details of each wallet鈥檚 privacy features; the influential effect of the ranking order persisted.

What鈥檚 more, students who had expressed stronger preferences for privacy 鈥 whether it was privacy from the government, the commercial provider, or the public 鈥 essentially behaved no differently than those who said privacy was less of a concern, the study found.

Easy and cheesy        

To see whether a small incentive could influence a decision about privacy, researchers offered one group of students a free pizza 鈥 as long as they disclosed three friends鈥 email addresses.

An overwhelming majority of the students chose pizza over protecting their friends鈥 privacy. Differences in gender or their stated personal sensitivities to privacy did not seem to have any effect on the choice.

People 鈥渁re willing to relinquish private data quite easily when incentivized to do so,鈥 the study put plainly.

Researchers also gave students an option to add additional encryption to help secure information in setting up their wallets. Though the encryption would not have added a security benefit to future wallet transactions, the offer was meant to test whether the participants were willing to take extra steps to protect their privacy.

好色App half of the students initially tried to go through the extra step of adding the reassuring feature. Yet only half of that group completed the process, while the rest returned to the easier setup option without the encryption.

Altogether, the experiment results show that 鈥渃onsumers deviate from their own stated preferences regarding privacy in the presence of small incentives, frictions and irrelevant information,鈥 the study stated.

The findings, released in June by the National Bureau of Economic Research, provide a rare snapshot: The privacy paradox has been widely observed, but empirical evidence from a real-world setting 鈥 involving choices with real consequences 鈥 has been limited.

Policy implications

The study raised two different policy implications.

Since the findings show consumers鈥 actions don鈥檛 align with what they say, and it鈥檚 difficult to gauge a consumer鈥檚 true privacy preference, policymakers might question the value of stated preferences.

On the other hand, consumers might need more extensive privacy protections to protect consumers from themselves and their willingness to share data in exchange for relatively small monetary incentives.

In any case, as people are quick to give up some privacy for less hassle, regulations should avoid inadvertently sticking consumers with additional effort or a less smooth experience as they make privacy-protective choices, the study stated.

Market challenges

鈥淭he big issue is that consumers say they want privacy, but if, for example, a firm introduced better privacy policies, would they actually get more customers? My observation is that generally, the answer is no,鈥 said Athey, who is the Economics Professor of Technology at 好色App Graduate School of Business and has been a consultant at Microsoft Corp. since 2007.

The traditional economic paradigm is that users have full information and they make informed choices. But that dynamic doesn鈥檛 hold if consumers do not take the time to really evaluate all the options, she said.

鈥淭hen the market provides weaker incentives for firms to really give consumers what they want.鈥

Consumer laziness may play a role, but Athey also thinks consumers don鈥檛 feel they have 鈥渕eaningful choices鈥 when it comes to how service providers 鈥 ranging from social media and email to banking and retail 鈥 handle personal data.

For social media, users will gravitate to where their friends are, regardless of privacy policies, Athey explained. At the same time, major email programs all have fairly similar privacy policies, so it鈥檚 tough to differentiate them, or understand how much switching to a new provider would actually improve the situation.

And no matter what businesses do with consumer privacy settings, or even if they blunder and anger users by disclosing or losing too much personal information, it appears that consumers will usually stick with them.

Numbness kicks in, too.

Having consumers repeatedly consent to legal privacy terms or confirm their acknowledgement of cookies just trains users to ignore them. In turn, such privacy notices probably have zero impact.

鈥淎nd I don鈥檛 see firms offering consumers really great choices about how long they will retain your data,鈥 Athey said. What would happen, say, if consumers had options among providers of how long their data is stored 鈥 10 years, two years, one year or six months?

鈥淲e don鈥檛 have those kinds of meaningful choices, and the policies we have don鈥檛 provide firms any incentive to offer those meaningful choices,鈥 she said.

The power of intermediaries

The study鈥檚 findings indicating the power of placement and navigation ease are consistent with consumer behaviors tech firms already know well.

鈥淏y and large, when you鈥檙e on a small screen, the information that is presented most conveniently is the information that you pay attention to,鈥 Athey said.

That鈥檚 why it鈥檚 important how Facebook ranks its news stories, which apps are at the top of a mobile store, or which web link leads a search query.

鈥淎ll of these technology intermediaries have a huge impact on what you read, what you consume, and what you buy just by how they present you information,鈥 Athey said.

In light of what we know about consumer behavior, 鈥渢he way privacy policies both here and in Europe have been designed is pretty ineffective,鈥 she said.

鈥淭here's a role for regulation here, clearly, in this area of privacy and security,鈥 Athey said, 鈥渂ut even beyond telling companies what to do, just making it simpler for consumers to make meaningful choices.鈥

It could be easier on consumers, for example, if privacy policies called for some kind of report card based on expert audits that evaluate tech firm practices. 鈥淭hen you as a consumer can say, 鈥業 really like this product, so I鈥檓 willing to take a B on this privacy policy,鈥欌 Athey said.

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