Of Money and Morals - The Contingent Effect of Monetary Incentives in Peer-to-Peer Volunteer Computing

dc.contributor.author Edinger, Janick
dc.contributor.author Edinger-Schons, Laura Marie
dc.contributor.author Schäfer, Dominik
dc.contributor.author Stelmaszczyk, Aleksander
dc.contributor.author Becker, Christian
dc.date.accessioned 2019-01-02T23:47:16Z
dc.date.available 2019-01-02T23:47:16Z
dc.date.issued 2019-01-08
dc.description.abstract Driven by technological advances, the recent trend of the sharing economy has brought up multiple globally successful companies, a disruption of business models, and presumably more sustainable alternatives to traditional resource allocation and consumption. Instead of depending only on professional companies, people increasingly share their resources in peer-to-peer networks. In volunteer computing systems, for example, device owners share their spare computational resources with other users. Despite the success stories in other businesses in the sharing economy, however, the popularity of such peer-to-peer computing systems has remained limited. The authors focus on the perspective of resource providers and develop a framework of the effectiveness of monetary incentives to motivate resource providers in volunteer computing. Drawing from Relational Models Theory and Motivation Crowding Theory, the framework proposes a three-way interaction between monetary incentives, social relationships, i.e., sharing with anonymous users versus with friends, and the individual predisposition of the user, i.e., their moral identity centrality. Informed by a preliminary survey, a between subjects experiment tests the propositions and delivers full support for the hypothesized contingencies. Monetary incentives can enhance the intrinsic motivation to share resources when sharing takes place amongst anonymous users. However, paying monetary rewards can disrupt motivation when sharing takes place among friends, especially when users have a high moral identity centrality. The authors discuss their result in the light of their conceptual and practical implications.
dc.format.extent 10 pages
dc.identifier.doi 10.24251/HICSS.2019.115
dc.identifier.isbn 978-0-9981331-2-6
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10125/59534
dc.language.iso eng
dc.relation.ispartof Proceedings of the 52nd Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences
dc.rights Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International
dc.rights.uri https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
dc.subject The Sharing Economy
dc.subject Collaboration Systems and Technologies
dc.subject Incentives, Motivaton Crowding, Sharing Economy, Volunteer Computing
dc.title Of Money and Morals - The Contingent Effect of Monetary Incentives in Peer-to-Peer Volunteer Computing
dc.type Conference Paper
dc.type.dcmi Text
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