Factors Affecting Consumer’s Illicit Purchase of Copyrighted Digital Work


Autoria(s): De Longis, Alexander
Data(s)

18/06/2009

18/06/2009

2009

Resumo

Peer-to-Peer (P2P) technology has revolutionized file exchange activities besides enhancing processing power distribution. As such, this technology which is nowadays made freely available to all internet users also imposes a threat as it enables the illegal distribution of copyrighted digital work. P2P technology continuously evolves in a greater pace than copyright legislation, leading to compatibility gaps between the applicability of copyright law and the illicit file sharing and downloading. Such issues give high incentives to consumers to practise piracy using P2P systems with a low perception of risk towards prosecution, leading to substantial losses for copyright owners. This study focuses on developing insights for content owners on consumer behaviour towards piracy in Finland, where quantitative analyses are assessed using a data set based on a survey conducted by the Helsinki Institute for IT. The research approach investigates the significance of three fundamental areas in relation to evaluate consumer behaviour as: environmental-related factors, innovation-related factors and consumer-related. each of these are integrates concepts derived in previous theoretical models such as the technology acceptance model, theory of reasoned action, theory of planned behaviour, the issue-risk-judgement model and the Hunt & Vitell’s model.

Identificador

http://www.doria.fi/handle/10024/45548

URN:NBN:fi-fe200906081603

Idioma(s)

en

Palavras-Chave #Поведение потребителей #закон об интеллектуалъной собственности #закон об авторском праве #пиринговые сути #технология усвоения #technology adoption #peer-to-peer #copyright law #intellectual copyrights #consumer behaviour
Tipo

Master's thesis

Diplomityö