Our data is up for grabs everywhere - be it tech companies, advertisers or marketers. Would you give up your digital life if all your personal information - passwords, posts, pictures, videos, jokes, memes, GIFs etc - remain private for the rest of your life or given back to you, with no duplicate data saved in the Dark Web? For four in 10 people (38 per cent), this is a steal deal as consumers' personal information is becoming incredibly valuable to them, says a latest report from global cybersecurity firm Kaspersky.Social media services like Facebook, Instagram or Twitter have become a significant part of our lives and according to Kaspersky's report, 82 per cent of people now use them globally.
Several years ago, people shared their private information with social media services in exchange for various benefits, without even thinking about the potential threats and their consequences.
"With a rising number of data leaks around
the world, we are seeing a new trend among consumers. Many prefer not to have
certain facts about themselves revealed in public and are paying more attention
to the information they share with online services," says Marina Titova,
Head of Consumer Product Marketing at Kaspersky.
However,
the majority still don't know how to protect their digital privacy and would
give up social media to guarantee their information remains secure.
The truth is: Your data is up for
grabs everywhere - be it tech companies, advertisers or marketers.
After facing flak for using unethical and
discreet ways of collecting user-information, Facebook has now decided to pay
Android users in India and the US just to monitor how they use their
phones.
The social networking giant has launched a new
app called Study which is available for download on Google's Play Store for
Android users aged 18 and above.
The app would not only monitor installed apps on
a person's phone but also observe the amount of time spent on those apps along
with details like the users' location and additional app data which could
reveal other specific features being used.
According to Kaspersky's report
titled, "The true value of digital privacy: are consumers selling
themselves short?", fears surrounding protecting digital privacy have made
consumers more anxious about the use and distribution of their personal
information on the Internet.
However, despite these various benefits, some
would still opt out of social media if it helped to restore their digital
privacy forever.
One in 10 (12 per cent) people who give away
their personal information to register for fun quizzes, such as what celebrity
they look like or what their favourite meal is, would not be able to do so
anymore. It may be even more problematic,
though, for 58 per cent people who would no longer be able to use their social
login details to quickly and conveniently authorize themselves on different
websites or services. Perhaps even more surprisingly, at a time when
the number of mobile phone users is rising 2 per cent year-on-year, one-in-five
(19 per cent) would be ready to wave goodbye to their handsets altogether to
guarantee their data remains private for the rest of their life. Unfortunately,
even sacrificing your entire social media presence wouldn't be sufficient to
protect digital privacy an it's a process, not a one-time deal that can be
bargained for. "Keeping
personal information safe - by regularly updating social media account
passwords and using security solutions - will give consumers more confidence in
the security of their data online," said Titova.
13 Feb, 2021
13 Feb, 2021