Abstract

Studies show that privacy concerns are an important factor in m-commerce and m-buyers are often not ready to disclose private data to m-shops. An e-questionnaire survey was used to gather opinions in three groups – ca. 160 Poles, ca.160 Ukrainians and ca.130 Romanians, to study decisions of potential consumers concerning disclosure of personal data when downloading paid or free mobile applications in 3 different contexts: downloading an attractive app to their smartphone as a gift, as a promo purchase, or from a well-known brand. The study showed that different kinds of personal data have different fragility levels. The e-mail had the lowest level of concern, postal address a medium level, and ID and credit card numbers the highest. Context was also shown to change the kind of data respondents are willing to exchange for an attractive app. When the measure of internet experience was subjective to the length of internet use, people with higher internet experience were not found to be more unlikely to download an attractive app to their smartphone, if a condition of downloading it was providing personal identification data, in comparison with persons with low internet experience. When internet experience was measured by social norms (living in a country with a higher e-readiness index), persons with higher experience levels were less likely to download apps requiring the provision of personal data. The text ends with recommendations and suggestions for further research.

Highlights

  • M-commerce is understood as a form of e-shopping carried out through mobile telecommunication (Koh et al 2009; Wong et al 2012; Groß 2016)

  • The main theoretical models that formed the basis for those studies were based on rational choice models (Ajzen 1991) either in the form of theories referring to the technology acceptance model (TAM) (Davis 1989) and its extensions (Venkatesh & Bala 2008; Venkatesh et al 2012; Dwivedi et al 2019), or the diffusion innovation theory (DIT) (Rogers 1995), or - the theory of perceived risk (Bauer 1960; Groß 2016)

  • An additional goal of the study is to verify whether internet experience is a modifier of the strength of barriers to trust in m-commerce

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Summary

Introduction

M-commerce is understood as a form of e-shopping (a set of activities carried out in the entire purchasing cycle, namely from gathering purchase information, through closing online transactions, to post-purchase behaviors) carried out through mobile telecommunication (usually smartphones) (Koh et al 2009; Wong et al 2012; Groß 2016). This type of shopping is still a new phenomenon, but the dynamics of its development and the expectations that are associated with it attract a lively interest, both in practice and research. Trust is an essential factor in m-commerce and it has been considered in many studies (Mondego & Gide 2018)

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