We are happy to announce that the paper “Second-Order Digital Inequality: The Case of E-Commerce” (A. Reinartz, K. Buhtz, A. König, L. Graf-Vlachy, J. Mammen) has been successfully accepted at the International Conference on Information Systems (ICIS) that will take place in Auckland, New Zealand in December 2014. ICIS is one the most prestigious conferences in the Management Information Systems research field and attracts top MIS academics and research-oriented practitioners from around the world. Accepted research papers will be published as part of the Conference Proceedings which are ranked as VHB Jourqual A. Our paper studies the phenomenon of second-order digital inequality – the observation that individuals differ systematically in how they use information and communication technologies depending on their socio-economic status. We specifically focus on the realm of e-commerce and explore how individuals vary in their ability to leverage the wide range of cost-saving opportunities available when shopping online. Building on a clickstream sample tracking the online activities to 2819 e-commerce users over a period of 6 months, we find substantial support for our hypothesis that digital inequality persists in the e-commerce context. Our findings have significant implications both for policy makers – with regard to the promotion of digital skills, ICT education and consumer awareness – and managerial practice – in terms of effectively targeting different societal groups.