Title :
Notice of Violation of IEEE Publication Principles
Security in E-Commerce and the Economics of Immediate Satisfaction
Author :
Zhang, Min ; Jiang, Renguo ; Hu, Haiqing
Author_Institution :
XAIPE, Xi´´an
Abstract :
Notice of Violation of IEEE Publication Principles
"Security in E-Commerce and the Economics of Immediate Satisfaction,"
by Min Zhang; Renguo Jiang; Haiqing Hu,
in the Proceedings of the International Conference on Computational Intelligence and Security Workshops, 2007. CISW 2007. Dec. 2007, pp.588-591
After careful and considered review of the content and authorship of this paper by a duly constituted expert committee, this paper has been found to be in violation of IEEE\´s Publication Principles.
This paper contains significant portions of original text from the paper cited below. The original text was copied without attribution (including appropriate references to the original author(s) and/or paper title) and without permission.
Due to the nature of this violation, reasonable effort should be made to remove all past references to this paper, and future references should be made to the following article:
"Privacy in Electronic Commerce and the Economics of Immediate Gratification,"
by Alessandro Acquisti,
in the Proceedings of the 5th ACM Conference on Electronic Commerce, Association for Computing Machinery, New York, 2004.
This paper apply lessons from the investigation on behavioral economics to understand the decision making process with regard to safety in electronic business. This paper shows that it is unreasonable to expect individual rationality in this context. Models of self-decision problems and satisfaction offer more descriptions of the decision process and are more consistent with available data. In particular, this paper shows why who may genuinely want to protect their safety might not do so because of psychological tortuosity well documented in the behavioral literature; we show that these tortuosity may affect not only \´naive\´people but also \´sophisticated\´ ones; and we testify that this may occur also when people become aware of the risks from not protecting their safety as significan- t.
Keywords :
electronic commerce; security of data; behavioral economics; decision making process; e-commerce security; electronic business safety; immediate satisfaction; Computational intelligence; Decision making; Equations; Marketing and sales; Privacy; Protection; Psychology; Road safety; Security; Testing;
Conference_Titel :
Computational Intelligence and Security Workshops, 2007. CISW 2007. International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Heilongjiang
Print_ISBN :
978-0-7695-3073-4
DOI :
10.1109/CISW.2007.4425564