Source - http://www.pcworld.com/
By - Loek Essers
Category - Suites In New Orleans
Posted By - Homewood Suites New Orleans
A majority of U.S. Internet users polled in a recent survey report
taking steps to remove or mask their digital footprints online,
according to a report from the Pew Research Center’s Internet Project
and Carnegie Mellon University.
By - Loek Essers
Category - Suites In New Orleans
Posted By - Homewood Suites New Orleans
Suites In New Orleans |
While 86 percent of the Internet users polled said they made some
attempt hide what they do online, more than half of the Web users also
said they have taken steps to avoid observation by organizations,
specific people or the government, according to the survey.
The survey’s findings are based on telephone interviews among a sample
of 1002 adults, age 18 or older in July, with 792 Internet users among
the respondents.
People use a variety of measures to decrease their online visibility,
the study showed. The most popular one is clearing cookie and browser
history, which 64 percent of Internet users polled said they did.
Forty-one percent said they deleted or edited something they had posted
in the past and 41 percent said they disabled or turned off their
browsers’ use of cookies, Pew said.
Other measures taken to cloak online activity were not using websites
that asked to disclose a user’s real name (36 percent of users polled),
using a temporary user name or email address (26 percent), posting
comments without revealing who you are (25 percent). Twenty-one percent
of the Internet users polled said they had asked others to remove
something that was posted about them.
Some Internet users also use public computers to browse and give
inaccurate information about themselves, while 14 percent said they at
times encrypt email and 14 percent said they use services like virtual
networks or proxy servers such as Tor anonymity software, which allow
them to browse without being tied to a specific IP address, the survey
found.
Beyond general measures taken to go online more or less anonymously, the
majority of Internet users polled (55 percent) have tried to avoid
observation by specific people or groups. “Hackers, criminals and
advertisers are at the top of the list of groups people wish to avoid,”
Pew said.
But a minority of Web users said they tried to hide their online
activities from certain friends, people form their past, family members
or partners as well as their employers, coworkers, supervisors,
companies, people that might want payment for downloaded files and to a
lesser extent the government (5 percent) and law enforcement (4
percent).
However, despite these precautions 21 percent of the online adults
polled said they have had an email or social media account hijacked and
11 percent said they have had vital information like Social Security
numbers, bank account data, or credit cards stolen.
Discovering that many Internet users have tried to conceal their
identity or their communications from others was the biggest surprise to
the research team, they said in a news release. Not only hackers, but
almost everyone has taken some action to avoid surveillance and despite
their knowing that anonymity is virtually impossible, most Internet
users think they should be able to avoid surveillance online, they said.
Most U.S. citizens would like to be anonymous and untracked online, at
least every once in a while, but many think it is not possible to be
completely anonymous online, Pew said. “This reinforces the notion that
privacy is not an all-or-nothing proposition for internet users. People
choose different strategies for different activities, for different
content, to mask themselves from different people, at different times in
their lives,” the researchers wrote.
One of the most revealing contradictions in the results of the survey is
that those who have taken steps to try to avoid observation by others
and those who have taken more general steps to be anonymous are more
likely than others to have personal information posted online, the
researchers said.
Internet users surveyed said they have a photo of themselves online (66
percent), while about half of those polled said their birth date was
available online. A minority said that their email address, home
address, mobile number or political affiliation was available.
A majority of Web users polled, 66 percent, said they think current
privacy laws are not good enough to provide reasonable protections for
people’s privacy on their online activities.
“Interestingly, there are not noteworthy differences in answers to this
question associated with political or partisan points of view. Tea Party
supporters, conservative Republicans, self-described moderates, and
liberal Democrats are not statistically significantly different in their
answers,” the researchers wrote.
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