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Perceptions of legal risk do not predict behaviour in unlawful file sharing: an empirical analysis

Research output: Contribution to conference - Without ISBN/ISSN Speech

Published

Standard

Perceptions of legal risk do not predict behaviour in unlawful file sharing: an empirical analysis. / Watson, Steven; Fleming, Piers; Zizzo, Daniel.
2015. European Policy for Intellectual Property, Glasgow, United Kingdom.

Research output: Contribution to conference - Without ISBN/ISSN Speech

Harvard

Watson, S, Fleming, P & Zizzo, D 2015, 'Perceptions of legal risk do not predict behaviour in unlawful file sharing: an empirical analysis', European Policy for Intellectual Property, Glasgow, United Kingdom, 2/09/15 - 3/09/15.

APA

Watson, S., Fleming, P., & Zizzo, D. (2015). Perceptions of legal risk do not predict behaviour in unlawful file sharing: an empirical analysis. European Policy for Intellectual Property, Glasgow, United Kingdom.

Vancouver

Watson S, Fleming P, Zizzo D. Perceptions of legal risk do not predict behaviour in unlawful file sharing: an empirical analysis. 2015. European Policy for Intellectual Property, Glasgow, United Kingdom.

Author

Watson, Steven ; Fleming, Piers ; Zizzo, Daniel. / Perceptions of legal risk do not predict behaviour in unlawful file sharing : an empirical analysis. European Policy for Intellectual Property, Glasgow, United Kingdom.

Bibtex

@conference{36f111789b75466688b2c83873be3301,
title = "Perceptions of legal risk do not predict behaviour in unlawful file sharing: an empirical analysis",
abstract = "To reduce the widespread unlawful downloading of copyrighted media, industry has responded via litigation against individual file sharers and by lobbying governments to strengthen intellectual property laws. Such approaches have had limited success in reducing unlawful content sharing. We explore how much perceptions of legal risk impact upon stated unlawful behaviour as well as how relevant factors such as the perceived benefits of unlawful file sharing, trust in industry and legal regulators, and perceived anonymity online impact upon this perceived risk. We examine these questions via a large two-part survey of consumers of music (n = 658) and eBooks (n = 737). We find perceptions of legal risk fail to predict stated file sharing behaviour, while the perceived benefit of unlawfully downloaded files does predict behaviour. The relationship between perceived risk and behaviour is partially mitigated by perceived benefits. We also show that trust in industry and regulators enhance perceptions of risk, while perceptions of anonymity lower perceptions of risk. High trust and high anonymity impact on the effect of perceived benefit on risk perception. These findings have practical implications in terms of the likely success of different behavioural interventions and theoretical implications into how perceptions of risk are processed.",
author = "Steven Watson and Piers Fleming and Daniel Zizzo",
year = "2015",
month = sep,
day = "3",
language = "English",
note = "European Policy for Intellectual Property ; Conference date: 02-09-2015 Through 03-09-2015",

}

RIS

TY - CONF

T1 - Perceptions of legal risk do not predict behaviour in unlawful file sharing

T2 - European Policy for Intellectual Property

AU - Watson, Steven

AU - Fleming, Piers

AU - Zizzo, Daniel

PY - 2015/9/3

Y1 - 2015/9/3

N2 - To reduce the widespread unlawful downloading of copyrighted media, industry has responded via litigation against individual file sharers and by lobbying governments to strengthen intellectual property laws. Such approaches have had limited success in reducing unlawful content sharing. We explore how much perceptions of legal risk impact upon stated unlawful behaviour as well as how relevant factors such as the perceived benefits of unlawful file sharing, trust in industry and legal regulators, and perceived anonymity online impact upon this perceived risk. We examine these questions via a large two-part survey of consumers of music (n = 658) and eBooks (n = 737). We find perceptions of legal risk fail to predict stated file sharing behaviour, while the perceived benefit of unlawfully downloaded files does predict behaviour. The relationship between perceived risk and behaviour is partially mitigated by perceived benefits. We also show that trust in industry and regulators enhance perceptions of risk, while perceptions of anonymity lower perceptions of risk. High trust and high anonymity impact on the effect of perceived benefit on risk perception. These findings have practical implications in terms of the likely success of different behavioural interventions and theoretical implications into how perceptions of risk are processed.

AB - To reduce the widespread unlawful downloading of copyrighted media, industry has responded via litigation against individual file sharers and by lobbying governments to strengthen intellectual property laws. Such approaches have had limited success in reducing unlawful content sharing. We explore how much perceptions of legal risk impact upon stated unlawful behaviour as well as how relevant factors such as the perceived benefits of unlawful file sharing, trust in industry and legal regulators, and perceived anonymity online impact upon this perceived risk. We examine these questions via a large two-part survey of consumers of music (n = 658) and eBooks (n = 737). We find perceptions of legal risk fail to predict stated file sharing behaviour, while the perceived benefit of unlawfully downloaded files does predict behaviour. The relationship between perceived risk and behaviour is partially mitigated by perceived benefits. We also show that trust in industry and regulators enhance perceptions of risk, while perceptions of anonymity lower perceptions of risk. High trust and high anonymity impact on the effect of perceived benefit on risk perception. These findings have practical implications in terms of the likely success of different behavioural interventions and theoretical implications into how perceptions of risk are processed.

M3 - Speech

Y2 - 2 September 2015 through 3 September 2015

ER -