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can low self-control help with the understanding of the software piracy problem?
198
Citations
66
References
2004
Year
Low Self-controlComputer EthicCriminal CodeBehavioral Decision MakingInformation SecurityLawCriminal LawUnfair CompetitionTechnology LawSelf-control TheorySelf-control HelpSocial SciencesPiracy ProtectionCopyright ProtectionCriminal BehaviorIntellectual PropertySoftware Piracy ProblemBehavioral SciencesCriminological TheoryEconomic CriminologyInformation ControlDigital Right ManagementMoral PsychologyCriminal JusticeBusinessCriminology Examines
ABSTRACT Computer crime—specifically, software piracy—is growing, and no research in criminology examines whether low self-control can help us understand the behavior. This study examines the link that Gottfredson and Hirschi's (1990) idea of low self-control has with software piracy. Using a nonrandom sample of college students and measures of low self-control, software pirating peers, software pirating attitudes, and moral beliefs toward software piracy, the findings show that low self-control has a link with software piracy. This finding expands the scope of self-control theory and provides an understanding of why the behavior occurs.
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