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Majority Internet Users Have False Sense Of Security
 
The annual 'Online Wellbeing Survey' by F-Secure was for the first time conducted in Italy, India and Hong Kong; it tested the respondents' knowledge of online security issues
 
DQC NEWS BUREAU
 
Friday, February 27, 2009

 

F-Secure announced results from its annual 'Online Wellbeing Survey'. This third-party survey of Internet users aged between 20-40 years in the US, Canada, UK, France, Germany-and for the first time-Italy, India and Hong Kong, tested the respondents' knowledge of online security issues (their 'security IQ').

F-Secure's annual online wellbeing survey, conducted in December 2008, shows that over 90 percent of people have security software installed on their computers. However, the knowledge of online threats is not as high; 71 percent may have a false sense of security and it is a Trojan not a 'Spartan' which presents a threat to your online security.

The majority of respondents across the countries (92 percent) said they have security software installed on their computers. At the same time only 21 percent of all the respondents knew that anti-virus definitions need to be updated many times a day. This indicates that a large population of users may have a false sense of security if their security software is expired or does not update automatically often enough. However, 67 percent were also aware that they need more than anti-virus to keep their PCs safe and almost 90 percent knew that they can get infected by visiting a malicious website, even if they don't download anything.

Sean Sullivan, Security Advisor, F-Secure Security Labs in Helsinki said, “The fact that millions of PCs keep getting infected shows that people do not always understand the way their security software works. The software they have chosen may be manual and curative, rather than automatic and preventative. This is often the difference between free and trial software, and a paid security service, which is automatically updated.”

The results show that people rely on their security software for online safety and secure websites to ensure the safety of their online shopping and banking. Just over 20 percent realize that appropriate online behavior on their own part also plays a big role. Respondents in Hong Kong and Germany were most aware of this. Respondents in the UK were least likely to pay attention to their own online habits to keep their devices safe. Respondents in India and Hong Kong relied on the security software they had purchased or the security service from their Internet Service Provider (70 percent in India, 50 percent in Hong Kong). Those surveyed in the US had the least confi­dence in purchased software but rather relied on secure websites. In France, respondents relied more on the security of their online shopping and banking websites than their software.

When asked which concept in a list (worms, phishers, Trojans, Spartans, bots) did not refer to an Internet security threat, 40 percent answered that they didn't know. Germany had the highest percentage of respondents (54 percent) who answered correctly that 'Spartans' are not concept in any way related to online security. The second savviest respondents were from Canada (38 percent). Only four percent of respondents in Hong Kong knew that 'Spartans' are not threatening.

The survey was carried out by independent third-party Zoomerang in December 2008 across 2019 Internet users aged 20-40 in the United States, Canada, France, Germany, UK, Italy, India and Hong Kong. There were approximately 200 persons surveyed per country. F-Secure asked respon­dents a series of basic online security questions and, using a Likert scale, asked them to rate the extent to which they were confident in the security of given online activities.

DQC NEWS BUREAU

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