Factors Influencing Reuse Intention of e-Payment in Thailand:
A Case Study of PromptPay
Kobthong Ladkoom
1
and Bundit Thanasopon
2
1
King Mongkut’s Institute of Technology Ladkrabang, Bangkok, Thailand
2
Information Technology Faculty, King Mongkut’s Institute of Technology Ladkrabang, Thailand
Keywords: e-Payment, Reuse Intention, Concern for Information Privacy (CFIP), TAM, PLS-SEM, Trust, Attitude,
Satisfaction, Confirmation, Perceived Usefulness, Privacy Risk, Risk Acceptability, Consumer’s Liability.
Abstract: Thai e-commerce is growing rapidly in the past few years. The driving factors for the rapid growth arise from
increased Internet and mobile phone use as well as improved e-payment and logistics. Thai government has
come up with a national e-payment initiative called “PromptPay” with an aim to reduce the use of cash and
catalyze the adoption of e-payment in Thailand. However, the use of e-payment in Thailand is still lagged
behind other countires. The objective of this research is therefore to identify factors influencing reuse
intension of e-payment in Thailand and their antecedents. For our preliminary study, we survey PromptPay
100 users in Bangkok and analyze the data using PLS-SEM technique. The results suggest that satisfaction
and attitude positively impact reuse intention of PromptPay. In addition, perceived usefulness is found to be
a driver of user satisfaction and positive attitude towards PromptPay, while positive confirmation affects
satisfaction. However, trust is unexpectedly found to be insignificant to reuse intention of PromptPay. Our
proposed conceptual model offers an alternative model studying e-payment adoption in other context, while
our findings could help Thai government in planning their strategy for improving the diffusion rate of
PromptPay in Thailand.
1 INTRODUCTION
Nowadays, e-commerce tends to play an increasingly
important role in our life. In order to be able to offer
convenience and fast service deliver to consumers,
service providers increasingly turn to electronic
payment (e-payment). According to the statistics
from Let’s Talk Payments, it is reported that during
2011 to 2015, e-payment generated and income of
over 296 billion USD (Gogoingkron, 2017).
In Thailand, the government has been trying to
encourage Thai people to adopt a national e-payment
system called “PromptPay” since 2015 which plays
an important role in the government’s strategy to use
technology to drive the economy. (Malabuppha T,
2017). PromptPay is a system that links Thai ID
number or mobile number to account is linked to the
owner’s bank account. A person with a PromptPay
account transfer money to or receive money from
another person with a PromptPay account with a very
small fee.
In the present, e-payment have become very
popular in Thailand which can be seen from the
e-payment usage statistics from 2016 to 2018 which
has went up 3.5%. The number of e-payment
registration is approximately 46.5 million accounts
and around 1.1 billion transactions in 2018 (Bank of
Thailand Statistics, 2018).
However, according to BIS
statistics, (2017),
while the amount of e-payment transactions in
Thailand has increased from 49 times/person/year by
the end of 2016 to 63 times/person/year in 2017, it is
still quite low when compared to other countries. It is
found that, for example, Singaporian uses e-payment
782 times/person/year 500 times/person/year for
Korean and 411 times/person/year for British. This
low usage rate may be due to the fact that
infrastructure supporting e-payment services tends to
be available only in big cities, making most Thai
people unable to reach the service. In addition, many
Thai people still have concerns about risks and
computer security when using e-payment as they
concern about their personal information such as
citizen ID, telephone numbers, e-wallet ID, bank
account or email address.
Ladkoom, K. and Thanasopon, B.
Factors Influencing Reuse Intention of e-Payment in Thailand: A Case Study of PromptPay.
DOI: 10.5220/0009410407430750
In Proceedings of the 22nd International Conference on Enterpr ise Information Systems (ICEIS 2020) - Volume 1, pages 743-750
ISBN: 978-989-758-423-7
Copyright
c
2020 by SCITEPRESS – Science and Technology Publications, Lda. All rights reserved
743
Because of those reasons, the researchers
recognize the importance of studying factors that
impact the Thai customers’ intention to use
e-payment repeatedly. Therefore, our research
objectives are to study factors that impact and
influence intention to reuse of e-payment in Thailand
and develop a conceptual framework of e-payment
reuse intention in Thailand. In this article, we start
with a literature review on technology reuse intention.
As a result, we identify six factors which are trust,
satisfaction, attitude, confirmation, perceived
usefulness and concerns for information privacy
(CFIP) and consequently create a conceptual model
for e-payment reuse intention. To verify the proposed
model, we collect data using questionnaire. The data
are analyzed and reported. Finally, we discuss on the
results of research are offer both academic and
practical implications.
2 LITERATURE REVIEW AND
RESEARCH HYPOTHESIS
2.1 Reuse Intention
Reuse intention can be defined as an intention to buy
products or services continually after consumers had
bought the products or services once. Besides, reuse
intention is associated with personal decision to
repeatedly purchase products and services from the
same business by considering their current situations
(Hellier et al., 2003). According to Bhattacherjee
(2001), the decision to reuse an information system
(of IS continuance usage) is the same as the decision
to repurchase products and services of the consumers
because reuse decision is influenced by the first time
that a user uses the information system.
Furthermore, it is also found that attitude and
perceived behavioral control, which, related to
“perceived value” and “perceived service quality”,
are the factors that influence the intention to
repurchase airline tickets of passengers in economy
class by using the theory of planned behavior (Jun and
Cheol, 2019).
In conclusion, the current study defines reuse
intention as the intention to purchase products and
services continually which occur when customers are
satisfied and have a positive attitude after they had
bought and use the products and services for the first
time. To put in the context of this study, we argue that
reuse intention of “PromptPay” is similar to
consumers’ repurchase intention. Specifically,
consumer satisfaction and positive attitude towards
PromptPay are the results of a positive first-time in
turn encourages continuous use of the system.
2.2 Expectation Confirmation Theory
Expectation Confirmation Theory (ECT) is a theory
that explains consumers’ repurchase intention. From
Figure 1, it can be seen that customers’ satisfaction is
decided by two factors, namely expectation and
confirmation. Prior to purchasing products or
services, customers usually have a certain level of
expectation on the performance levels. After
purchasing, they will evaluate the performance of the
purchased products or services and finally compare
what they get with their expectations. When what
customers receive is beyond their expectations, it
enhances the customers’ positive satisfaction. On the
contrary, if what they get is lower than their
expectations, their satisfaction will be negative
accordingly. Higher levels of satisfaction positively
affect repurchase intention, as shown in Figure 1
(Bhattacherjee et. al, 2001).
Figure 1: Expectation-Confirmation Theory (ECT).
Even though this theory is developed in consumer
product context, we argue that confirmation and
satisfaction also make a significant contribution to
PromptPay reuse intention. The reasons are explain in
the next section.
2.3 Factors Affecting the Use of
e-Payment
We reviewed the literature and developed a
conceptual model consisting of six factors, namely,
trust, attitude, satisfaction, confirmation, perceived
usefulness and CFIP (Figure 2).
2.3.1 Satisfaction
Prior works have provided several definitions of
satisfaction. For example, Oliver and Richard (1980)
proposes that satisfaction is the result of a comparison
between expectations and perceptions of the
performance
of purchased goods or services from
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744
Figure 2: Conceptual framework.
actual use. Gustafsson et al., (2015), satisfaction is the
difference between one’s expectation and the actual
outcomes that one perceives. Therefore, if a customer
receives a product or service that meet his/her
expectation, his/her satisfaction will be increased.
A high level of satisfaction often leads to word of
mouth and repurchase intension.
In summary, satisfaction refers to the feeling of
satisfaction of what customers receive and what they
expect when using e-payment. Customers’ satis-
faction will occur after using it. According to
(Gustafsson et al., 2015), the expectancy
confirmation Theory (ECT), indicates that
satisfaction is a result of experiences’ evaluation after
purchasing products and services whether the same as
their expectation or not. If the result is similar to their
expectations, it will make customers feel satisfied
which leads to repurchase intentions of the customers.
On the other hand, if customers’ evaluation is lower
than their expectations, it will make them feel
unsatisfied and do not use it again. From the research
of Nguyen and Tran (2018), they have studied
repurchase intention and factors that motivate people
to adopt mobile ride hailing apps in Vietnam. They
collected 427 questionnaires from Grab and Uber
users, and it was found that perceived service quality
and satisfaction of system quality motivates
customers to reuse the services.
Therefore, satisfaction is an important factor that
motivates customers return to use e-payment again.
H1: Satisfaction Positively Impacts Reuse
Intention of e-Payment.
2.3.2 Attitude
Attitude towards e-payment use is influenced by
perceived ease of use and perceived usefulness of the
e-payment system (Gustafsson, 2015). It is one of the
most important concepts in social psychology and
communication. From the literature review, there are
several definitions of attitude.
Schiffman and Kanuk (1994) defined that attitude
means propensity to express satisfaction towards a
thing or expression of inner feeling reflecting that
people have propensity of being satisfied or
unsatisfied with something, such as brands, shops or
e-payment systems.
To put it simply, attitude is thought, feeling or
satisfaction towards a certain thing, person or
satisfaction of purchasing products and services
which lead to related actions or unrelated actions.
Therefore, whenever consumers trust an e-payment
system that it is easy to use and beneficial, it creates
positive attitude, good satisfaction towards
e-payment, which is a significant contributor to reuse
intention. Norazah et al., (2011) perceived usefulness,
ease of use, entertainment and attitude as key
antecedents of intention to reuse 3G mobile service.
The result indicates that attitude and perceived
usefulness are related to the decision to reuse 3G of
customers. Thus, attitude is another essential factor of
intention to reuse e-payment.
H2: Attitude Positively Affects Reuse Intention
e-Payment.
2.3.3 Confirmation
Confirmation is a part of expectation-confirmation
Theory of continued IT usage (ECT-IT). The model
is developed from ECT which is used to explain
repurchase intention in consumer produces context
(Bhattacherjee et al., 2001). ECT is a model of
expectation and confirmation theories which are
developed to explain continuance usage intention of
information systems Figure 3.
Figure 3: Expectation-Confirmation Model of Continued IT
usage (ECM-IT) (Bhattacherjee et al., 2001).
As seen from the model, ECM-ITfocuses on three
factors. The first is satisfaction. The model proposes
that satisfaction has a positive effect on continuance
usage of IT products or services. Secondly, perceived
Factors Influencing Reuse Intention of e-Payment in Thailand: A Case Study of PromptPay
745
usefulness is a factor that motivates customers’
satisfaction because it can tell the benefits that
customers will receive from the experiences of using
IT products and services which affect on customers’
satisfaction as well as expectation-confirmation
theory. Lastly, confirmation is proposed to have a
positive impact on perceived usefulness can be
divided into three types of situations (1) positive
disconfirmation - what customers get is better than
their expectations. (2) confirmation - what customers
get is similar to their expectations. (3) negative
disconfirmation - what customers get is lower than
their expectations. Based on the ECM-IT model, we
propose the following two hypotheses:
H3: Confirmation or Positive Disconfirmation-
Positively Influences Satisfaction.
H4: Confirmation or Positive Disconfirmation
Positively Affects Perceive Usefulness.
2.3.4 Perceived Usefulness
Bhattacherjee et al., (2001) propose the ECT-IT
model and collected the data of 1,000 online banking
users. The results points out that perceived usefulness
and satisfaction influence reuse intention of
information system. Therefore, we propose that
perceived usefulness motivates customers’ reuse
intention of PromptPay because when customers
perceived the usefulness of Promptpay such as
cheaper fee, saving time and, convenience, it will
improve customer satisfaction of the service.
H5: Perceived Usefulness has a Positive Effect on
Satisfaction.
In addition, the literature on technology
acceptance model (TAM) has suggested perceived
usefulness as an antecedent to attitude toward using a
technology (Davis, 1989). Based on TAM, for
customers to have a positive attitude toward
PromptPay, they need to be able to perceived the
benefits or usefulness of the system. A positive
attitude then lead them to continuously decide to
reuse PromptPay.
H6: Perceived Usefulness has a Positive Effect on
Attitude.
2.3.5 Trust
Trust is a very important factor for online transactions
when compared to face-to-face transaction because it
often involves high levels of uncertainty and risk
factors. One of the major risks is information privacy
which is particularly important to e-payment
transaction. Credit card numbers or bank account
information leaks could lead to a negative impact on
trustworthiness of the website which in turn damage
consumer reuse intention. Generally, trust comes
from actual use and reuse of the e-payment system.
When customers build trust with the website, they
will make other transactions. If customers do not trust
the website, untrustworthiness will be and important
obstacle to online transactions (Gefen et al., 2003).
From the research of Pavlou, (2003), it was found
that trust is the willingness to risk for getting services
as it showed that trust involves with benevolent,
honest, competence and predictability. So, when trust
has been built, good customer relationships,
transaction costs reduction and fast service delivery
could be achieved. Consistently, studied factors
influencing reuse intention of online transactions by
collecting 400 responses using an online
questionnaire posted on a popular social media site.
They analyzed the collected data found a two-way
relationship between satisfaction and trust. The two
factors also positively influence reuse intention.
Consequently, we argue that trust is very
important to reuse intention of e-payment due to the
high information privacy risks involved. The system
will be accepted and successful when consumers trust
in the system. The more consumers trust, the more
chance they use again. In addition, when trust has
been built consumers will receive the benefits of
using e-payment because it saves the costs and time.
Therefore, we hypothesize the effect of trust as
follows:
H7: Trust Positively Influences e-Payment Reuse
Intention of PromptPay.
2.3.6 Concern for Information Privacy
(CFIP)
According to Zhou (2011), concern for information
privacy reflects users’ attitudes toward personal
information privacy. For online payment, some
consumers concern about revealing their personal
information such as identification number, telephone
number and bank account. In this article, we have
identified three dimensions of concern about
information privacy in the context of e-payment.
The first dimension is privacy risk. According to
Hang et al. (2005), there are six types of perceived
risk including financial risk, performance risk,
privacy risk, psychological risk, social risk and time
risk. For online payment or online transactions in
general, privacy risk has often been identified as one
of the most important inhibitors to adoption. Privacy
risk can be defined as the potential loss of control over
one's personal information.
Iris et al,. (2005) and Tao Zhou (2010) have the
same opinion that perceived risk has a negative
ICEIS 2020 - 22nd International Conference on Enterprise Information Systems
746
relationship with reuse intention of e-payment,
especially privacy risk. The risk of personal
information that might be revealed on the Internet can
cause users to perceive high risk and feel insecure,
causing them not be willing to use e-payment.
The second dimension is risk acceptability. Risk
acceptance informs decision to take a particular risk.
According to Eid (2016), rink acceptability in
e-payment is categorized into two types. First,
accepting the risk before using the system or
accepting risk during the online payment processes.
Second, the risk acceptance level, but it still needs to
be controlled, followed, detected and reviewed in
order to make sure that if they use e-payment, they
have to accept the risk.
Therefore, risk acceptability is a crucial factor
and influences concern for information privacy of
consumers both before and after deciding to use
e-payment. If the consumers cannot accept the risk,
they will always have concerns over the use of
e-payment which can lead to low levels of trust.
The third dimension is consumers’ liability.
when there are problems or mistakes while using
e-payment, they must be an institution that take
responsibility or a law that protect the consumer (Eid
et al., 2016) From the annual report of e-payment in
2016, it is found that the majority of consumers lack
the understanding and knowledge about any
responsible organization or institution case of
mistakes or fraudulent activities which causes
concerns and lack of trust to use e-payment.
To sum up, it can be concluded that concern for
information privacy (CFIP) refers to the concerns of
threats and insecure feeling about information
privacy and risks associated to making online
payment. CFIP has, three dimensions which are
privacy risk, acceptability and consumers’ liability. In
e-payment context, we argue that CFIP can have an
impact on these three dimensions are the important
factors that affect information privacy. If consumers
still concern about information privacy while using
e-payment, they will not trust the system. In contrast,
if consumers trust in the system, it will affect them to
have reuse intention of e-payment.
H8: Concern for Information Privacy (CFIP)
Negatively Impacts Trust.
3 RESEARCH METHODOLOGY
3.1 Data Collection
The data collection method of this study is survey.
We use paper-based questionnaire as our data
collection tool. The respondents in this research are
PromptPay users in Bangkok, Thailand. We had
collected 30 responses for the pilot test. After, the
pilot modifications have been made to the
questionnaire. We then be able to collect 115
responses. 12 responses of them were filtered out
since the respondents never use PromptPay and 3
incomplete responses
were also removed. The data
collection period was 4 months (from January – April
2019). We personally distributed the questionnaire in
banks, department stores, supermarkets and
restaurants.
The questionnaire was divided into 4 sections
including section 1: general information regarding
PromptPay use, section 2: questions for the factors,
section 3: demographic data, and section 4: an open-
ended question for suggestions.
3.2 Data Analysis
We test the proposed hypothesis using used partial
least square structural equation modeling or PLS-
SEM method. This method used covariation which
aims to estimate model parameters for explaining the
variance of latent variables. PLS-SEM has been used
increasingly in business management research such
as marketing, accounting, or IT. Moreover, PLS-SEM
can handle small sample sizes and exploratory
models, which is suitable for this research (Hair et al.,
2013). The software used for the analysis of this
research is Smart PLS 3.2.8.
4 RESULTS
Regarding the demographic data of the responses 52
persons were male, and 48 persons were female. 76
persons of them were single, and 24 persons of them
were married. The majority of the respondents are
between 21 and 30 years old (58%). Moreover, it is
also found that most respondents have at least
Bachelor’s degree (88%). The details are shown in
Table 1.
For the PLS-SEM analysis, we have created a
model of 7 latent variables, namely trust, satisfaction,
attitude, confirmation, concerns for information
privacy (CFIP), perceived usefulness and reuse
intention of PromptPay. The model also has a total of
31 observed variables.
We hypothesize CFIP as a formative construct
comprising of privacy risks, risk acceptability and
consumer’s liability. Therefore, the measurement
model evaluation is divided into 2 parts. (Hair et al.,
2012).
First, we evaluate reflective measurement
Factors Influencing Reuse Intention of e-Payment in Thailand: A Case Study of PromptPay
747
Table 1: Demographic data.
Descri
p
tion Unit Percent
Gender
- Male
- Female
52
48
52%
48%
Age
- Less than 20 years
- 21 - 30 years
- 31 - 40 years
- 41 - 50 years
- 51-60 years
3
58
29
8
2
3.0%
58.0%
29.0%
8.0%
2.0%
Educational background
- High school or below
- Undergraduate degree
- Bachelor degree
- Master Degree
- Doctoral
2
10
84
3
1
2.0%
10.0%
84.0%
3.0%
1.0%
model using Cronbach’s α, composite reliability
(CR), outer loadings and AVE. We found no internal
consistency reliability issues. For all constructs,
Cronbach’s
α are between 0.831-0.907 and CR are
between 0.887-0.935 which are more than the
acceptable level of 0.7. Regarding convergent
validity, outer loadings of all indicators are between
0.736-0.890. Moreover, the AVE values are between
0.657-0.818, well above the recommended value of
0.5. Therefore, it can be concluded that measurement
model is reliable. The data are displayed in Table 2.
The second part is the evaluation of the formative
measurement model of CFIP. We employ a two-stage
approach. For the first stage, a repeated indicator
approach was used. Next, the latent variable scores of
the first-order constructs are used as indicators for the
higher-order construct in the models tested in a
separate second stage Figure 4. To evaluate the
formative model, the researchers employ VIF to
check for multicollinearity and the t-values of the
formative indicators’ outer weight (Hair et al., 2012).
No multicollinearity issues were found and all outer
weights are significant.
Table 2: Outer Model : Reflective measurement model.
Latent Variables Cronbach’s α CR AVE
Attitude 0.888 0.931 0.818
Confirmation 0.809 0.887 0.724
Perceived
Usefulness
0.869 0.905 0.657
Reuse Intention
of PromptPa
y
0.907 0.935 0.783
Satisfaction 0.846 0.906 0.764
Trust 0.831 0.887 0.664
Next, we move on to structural model evaluation.
This process consists of three, procedures which are:
(1) collinearity assessment, (2) structural model: path
coefficients and (3) coefficient of determination. (R
2
).
For collinearity assessment the VIF values of all
predictor constructs are lower than 5.0 (Hair et al.,
2012).
Secondly, to obtain estimates of the structural
model relationships, we run the PLS-SEM algorithm
using SmartPLS software version 3.2.8 (Hair et al.,
2012) with a path weighting scheme, initial outer
weights of +1, maximum iterations of 300, and a stop
criterion of 10
7
. The results displayed in Figure 4.
Figure 4: Path Model of PLS-SEM.
The coefficient of determination assesses the
model’s predictive capabilities. It represents the
exogenous latent variables’ combined effects on the
endogenous latent variable (Hair et al., 2014). The
closer the R
2
value is to 1, the higher the levels of
predictive accuracy. The R
2
values of the endogenous
latent variables: reuse intention of PromptPay,
attitude and satisfaction, are 0.752, 0.636 and 0.605,
respectively.
Table 3: Path coefficients.
Coefficients t-values
Attitude Reuse Intention
of PromptPa
y
0.519*** 4.948
CFIP Trust 0.511 6.172
Confirmation Perceived
usefulness
0.550*** 9.113
Confirmation Satisfaction 0.408*** 5.013
Perceived Usefulness
Attitude
0.702*** 10.212
Perceived Usefulness
Satisfaction
0.362*** 3.282
Satisfaction Reuse
Intention of PromptPa
y
0.182*** 1.923
Trust Reuse Intention of
PromptPay
0.176 1.360
From the path coefficients analysis, we can
summarize that H1, H2, H3, H4, H5, H6 are
supported, while. H7, H8 are rejected.
ICEIS 2020 - 22nd International Conference on Enterprise Information Systems
748
5 DISCUSSION
In this section, we compare and contrast our findings
with prior studies as well as discuss on possible
reasoning behind each relationship.
To our surprise we find that trust has no influence
on PromptPlay reuse intention. The study has
indicated that trust has an influence on reuse intention
of online transactions. A possible explanation could
be that the consumers have already had a high level
of trust in the PromptPay service sine it is a service
provided by the government. Therefore, they do not
really concern about trust when deciding to
continuously use PromptPay.
As expected, attitude has a positive effect on a
reuse intention of PromptPay. The finding conforms
with a research of Norazah et al. (2011) who find a
positive relationship between attitude and a decision
to repeatedly use 3G mobile services.
Satisfaction, has an effect on a reuse intention of
PromptPay. This is consistent with a research by
Nguyen and Tran (2018) which uncovers that
satisfaction positively affects repurchasing of
m-commerce ride hailing in Vietnam.
We also find that confirmation has an effect on
satisfaction. Similarly, Chin et al. (2015) point out
that satisfaction directly affects on reuse intention of
online transactions continuously. When customers
found a new channel to make an e-transaction. They
will be satisfied and will perceive the benefits of
e-transaction which creates a reuse intention because
it makes customers convenient, reduce the costs and
save their time when making an e-transaction. This
will be according to t-values p-values H3:
Confirmation or positive disconfirmation-positively
influences satisfaction. And H4: Confirmation or
positive disconfirmation positively affects perceived
usefulness.
Perceived usefulness has been found to have
positive effects on satisfaction and attitude. The
findings are consistent with TAM (Gefen et al., 2003)
and ECT-IT models (Bhattacherjee et al., 2001).
PromptPay allows consumers to make payment and
transfer money with less fee in no time when
compared to the traditional methods. These benefits
could make the consumers to be satisfied and have a
positive attitude.
Surprisingly, we found a positive relationship
between CFIP and trust. The direction of the
relationship is opposite to what we initially expected.
An explanation to this unanticipated finding is that,
even though consumers are concerned about
information privacy issues of PromptPay, they still
have high levels of trust in the system anyway since
it is run by the government.
6 CONCLUSION
This research aims to investigate the factors which
motivate customers to reuse PromptPay in Thailand.
From data of 100 PromptPay users in Bangkok, we
analyze the data using PLS-SEM and discover that
satisfaction and positive attitude are the main drivers
of reuse intention of e-payment.
Additionally, we suggest that in order to improve
user satisfaction and attitude towards an e-payment
system is useful to them. Moreover, it is also
important that the performance of the e-payment
system meets users’ initial expectation. If the
expectation is met, the users will perceive the system
as useful as well as be more satisfied. Unexpectedly,
trust is not found to be significant and the direction of
the relationship between CFIP and trust is in contrast
to our hypothesis.
In terms of implications, the proposed model
could also be a starting point for those who want to
study e-payment adoption in other contexts.
Moreover, the surprising finding of CFIP and trust
should be further investigated reuse. We argue that
the role of information privacy and trust in private and
public context of e-payment might be different. For
practical contributions, the findings provide
guidelines for the government agencies that is
responsible for encouraging PromptPay use among
Thai people.
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