CONSUMERS HAVE FALSE SENSE OF SECURITY ABOUT ONLINE PRIVACY – ACTIONS INCONSISTENT WITH ATTITUDES
TRUSTe/TNS Survey Shows A Majority of Internet Users Believe They Know How to Protect Their Privacy Online, Most Fail to Take Needed Actions
The research indicates that a majority of online consumers do not read privacy statements—one of the primary tools organizations use to communicate their privacy practices. When providing personal information to a Web site for the first time:
Based on guidelines issued by the Federal Trade Commission and the Center for Democracy & Technology, TRUSTe recommends that consumers take a number of steps to protect their privacy online. The survey reveals that a minority of Internet users have done eight of the 10 recommended actions in the past six months:
“While the majority of consumers surveyed say they care about their privacy online and feel confident about how to protect themselves, the survey results suggest that consumers are not consistently following through in taking actions to protect their personal information,” said Fran Maier, executive director and president, TRUSTe. “The data show that we have more work to do in educating consumers about making informed choices regarding their privacy.”
A majority of Internet users surveyed took three of the recommended actions in the past six months:
“Our goal was to determine whether consumers take the recommended actions to protect themselves on the Internet,” said David Stark, North America privacy officer, TNS. “While it is encouraging that many are using software applications to safeguard themselves online, these tools alone aren’t sufficient.”
The results also indicate that a majority of consumers are confused about the role of a Web site’s privacy statement. Fifty-three percent of survey respondents believe that a posted privacy statement means the organization “will never sell or give any of my personal information to anyone else.”
Who Do Consumers Trust?
Internet users surveyed were asked to indicate which organizations they trust to keep their personal information secure. Banks and financial institutions are clearly the most trusted group, with 76 percent of respondents reporting that they trust them “always” or “most of the time.” Results for other organizations consumers trust always or most of the time include:
Only 33 percent of survey respondents say they trust companies to honor their choice to not receive spam “always” or “most of the time.”
Online Trust Impacts Consumer Behavior
The survey shows that consumer trust online impacts behavior. In the past six months:
“Online trust issues continue to impact consumer behavior on the Internet. High profile privacy breaches this year have exacerbated consumer concern,” said Maier. “It’s vital for organizations to employ responsible practices and to effectively demonstrate their commitment to privacy protections to their customers.”
Commissioned by TRUSTe and conducted by market research group TNS, the survey polled 1,025 U.S. consumers between September 25 and September 29, 2006. Email invitations were sent to a nationally representative sample of the U.S. adult online population derived from the TNS NFO Internet Access Panel, which comprises more than one million U.S. households that have agreed to participate in survey research from time to time. In total, 1,025 online interviews were completed and the survey results are considered accurate to within three percentage points, 19 times out of 20.
Interviews, Resources Available:
About TRUSTe
TRUSTe helps consumers and businesses identify trustworthy online organizations through its Web Privacy and Email Privacy Seals and resolves thousands of individual privacy disputes each year. An independent, nonprofit organization celebrating its 10th anniversary in 2007, TRUSTe runs the world’s largest privacy seal program, with more than 2,000 Web sites certified, including the major internet portals and leading brands such as AOL, Microsoft, IBM, Oracle, Intuit and eBay. Through its Trusted Download Program, TRUSTe develops standards for non-intrusive downloads that demonstrate consumer choice. TRUSTe also provides accreditation, monitoring and oversight for email with the Email Privacy Seal Program, and for Return Path’s SenderScore Certified Program. To learn more, visit www.truste.org.
About TNS
TNS is a market information group:
TNS operates across a global network in over 70 countries, allowing the firm to provide internationally consistent, up-to-the-minute and high quality information and analysis.
TNS is the sixth sense of business.