Study reveals skeptical online trust, confusion
A new study of mid-size businesses
and consumers revealed that many are confused and lack trust when it comes to
the privacy and security of their online data and behaviour. The research,
which covered six countries in Europe and North America, found that people
worry that hackers, their own and foreign governments, employers and even
friends and family might want to access their online data, and how to stop
them.
(Download the Geopolitical survey
2018 infographic: http://bit.ly/2qCQ2YZ)
The independent study,
commissioned by Kaspersky Lab (www.Kaspersky.com) with the data analysis
undertaken by Applied Marketing Research, surveyed 600 mid-sized companies with
IT security professionals as well as 6,000 consumers with security software
installed on their devices, split equally across France, Germany, Italy, Spain,
the UK and the US.
The top unwelcome intruders were,
not surprisingly, cybercriminals, with 45% of businesses and 47% of consumers
worried about protecting their online data from malicious attack. But this is
followed closely by wanting to protect it from their own government (36% and
33% respectively), and foreign governments and companies (30% and 26%). As many
as one in three (29%) business respondents have concerns about their employer
getting to their online data, while a quarter (26%) of consumers worry about
their family snooping.
These concerns extended to
cybersecurity, where there was widespread confusion about the information
cybersecurity providers could access. Many respondents worry that their
provider might gather their online data, opinions, location or browsing habits
and then share this information with foreign entities. However, the vast
majority (87% of businesses and 82% of consumers) trust their security provider
to behave ethically in the collection and use of their data.
These results suggest that the
current cybersecurity landscape has created for both businesses and consumers
an environment of fear, uncertainty and doubt that has left many struggling to
trust anyone at all online.
Commenting on these findings,
Anton Shingarev, VP of public affairs at Kaspersky Lab, said, “These research
results are indeed amazing. They provide further evidence that technologies and
software are a black box for many companies. They don’t know how they work,
what’s inside, what data is collected or how it’s stored. As a result, they
don’t trust vendors. I believe this to be unacceptable, and, as an industry, we
need to ensure that people understand exactly what we do and what kind of
things a security provider would never do. This should be accompanied by an
ongoing commitment to building resilience and security into our products, and
to proving their trustworthiness through transparency and accountability. All
this is embedded in our Global Transparency Initiative, a program designed to
help rebuild trust in information security.”
Other findings of the research
include:
Privacy appears to be considered
a fundamental right for everyone: 46% of businesses and 51% of consumers
believe a cybersecurity provider should not automatically have to share a
user’s private data with the government in matters of national security, but
that it should depend on the circumstances.
The research also suggests that
other things matter more to business and consumers than a company’s country of
origin: 55% of businesses and 66% of consumers say their government should do
business with the company that offers the highest quality products or services,
even if it is a foreign company. Surprisingly, this rises to 82% and78%
respectively when it concerns areas crucial to national security.
Commenting on the findings, Dr.
Milton Mueller, Professor, Georgia Institute of Technology School of Public
Policy, Internet Governance Project, added: “This survey addresses the nexus
between nationalism, national security and trust in internet service providers.
There are surprising findings regarding consumer and business attitudes towards
the role of governments in cybersecurity. For example, it was fascinating to
see how many consumers believe that their government should use the best vendor
for national security-related capabilities regardless of what country it is
from. It was also interesting to see that consumers are more likely to fear
their data will be interfered with by their own government than foreign
governments.”
Learn more about Kaspersky Lab
transparency principles and the Global Transparency Initiative here:
www.Kaspersky.com/about/transparency
A report summarising the main
findings of the research, The boundaries of trust: privacy and protection in
cyberspace, is available here (http://bit.ly/2yYIJQ1).
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