Paying with your information: The efficiency-enhancing effects of data provision

DOI

Internet services are often free of charge, but ask for customers’ personal data in exchange for usage. We experimentally study whether the provision of information-based public goods is susceptible to restraint when contributions not only make contributors better off, but also enable a non-contributing “big player” to acquire substantial profits. We show that the presence of the big player crowds out the willingness to provide money, but no such effect is observed for information. Hence, collecting anonymized personal data instead of monetary fees can be more profitable to service providers and create greater benefits for customers.

Laborexperiment

Laboratory experiment

Identifier
DOI https://doi.org/10.7802/1899
Metadata Access https://api.datacite.org/dois/10.7802/1899
Provenance
Creator Rockenbach, Bettina; Sadrieh, Abdolkarim; Anne, Schielke
Publisher GESIS Data Archive
Publication Year 2019
Rights CC BY-ND 4.0
OpenAccess true
Representation
Resource Type Dataset
Format application/pdf; text/x-stata-syntax; application/zip
Size 83091; 7887; 5800
Version 1
Discipline Social Sciences
Spatial Coverage Deutschland / DE; Germany / DE