Synonyms
Definition
There is no universal agreement on what is privacy. Within law and economics, privacy has been modeled as concealment of personal information (Posner 1978, 1981) and as the standard deviation in the probability distribution forming people’s perception over our personal information, with privacy loss being a tighter posterior in that distribution (Cofone and Robertson 2018a).
Introduction
The law and economics literature on information privacy revolves around two dialogues, one normative and one empirical. To a large extent, these dialogues have remained separate. The normative dialogue asks whether privacy is worth protecting, to what extent, and how. The empirical dialogue focuses on better understanding consumer behavior through experimental methods.
Normative Privacy
The puzzling aspect of the normative debate is that while much of the normative economic literature argues categorically against privacy protection, most of the...
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Cofone, I.N. (2019). Privacy. In: Marciano, A., Ramello, G.B. (eds) Encyclopedia of Law and Economics. Springer, New York, NY. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4614-7753-2_751
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