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%T Citizens' Acceptance of Data-Driven Political Campaigning: A 25-Country Cross-National Vignette Study %A Vliegenthart, Rens %A Vrielink, Jade %A Dommett, Katharine %A Gibson, Rachel %A Bon, Esmeralda %A Chu, Xiaotong %A Vreese, Claes H. de %A Lecheler, Sophie %A Matthes, Jörg %A Minihold, Sophie %A Otto, Lukas P. %A Stubenvoll, Marlis %A Kruikemeier, Sanne %J Social Science Computer Review %N 5 %P 1101-1119 %V 42 %D 2024 %K cross-national comparison; data driven campaigns; data-driven campaigning; microtargeting; privacy; privacy regulations; vignette study; vignettes %@ 1552-8286 %~ GESIS %U localfile:/var/local/dda-files/prod/crawlerfiles/49e69f598a354a2299aac6ad9e88fc15/49e69f598a354a2299aac6ad9e88fc15.pdf %X This paper investigates how the acceptance of data-driven political campaigning depends on four different message characteristics. A vignette study was conducted in 25 countries with a total of 14,390 respondents who all evaluated multiple descriptions of political advertisements. Relying on multi-level models, we find that in particular the source and the issue of the message matters. Messages that are sent by a party the respondent likes and deal with a political issue the respondent considers important are rated more acceptable. Furthermore, targeting based on general characteristics instead of individual ones is considered more acceptable, as is a general call to participate in the upcoming elections instead of a specific call to vote for a certain party. Effects differ across regulatory contexts, with the negative impact of both individual targeting and a specific call to vote for a certain party being in countries that have higher levels of legislative regulation. %C USA %G en %9 Zeitschriftenartikel %W GESIS - http://www.gesis.org %~ SSOAR - http://www.ssoar.info