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FACTBOX - Hacks and facts: 10 things you didn't know about data privacy

by Umberto Bacchi | @UmbertoBacchi | Thomson Reuters Foundation
Monday, 28 January 2019 19:13 GMT

Did you know less than 60 percent of countries have laws to secure the protection of data and privacy?

LONDON, Jan 28 (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - From hackers exposing private information online to the handling of users' data by internet giants, online privacy has become a matter of growing concern for countries, companies and people alike.

On Monday, countries around the world marked Data Privacy Day, also known as Data Protection Day - an initiative to raise awareness of internet safety issues.

Here are 10 facts about online privacy:

Less than 60 percent of countries have laws to secure the protection of data and privacy.

* Europe's data protection regulators have received more than 95,000 complaints about possible data breaches since the adoption of a landmark EU privacy law in May.

* More than one in two respondents to a 2018 global survey by pollster CIGI-Ipsos said they had grown more concerned about their online privacy compared to the previous year.

* Almost 40 percent of respondents to another survey by cyber-security firm Kaspersky Lab said they did not know how to protect themselves from cybercrime.

* A survey of tech professionals by security key maker Yubico suggested experts might not live up to safety standards. It found almost 70 percent of respondents shared passwords with colleagues.

* More than half reused an average of five passwords across their work and personal accounts.

* About 4 percent of people targeted by an email phishing campaign would click on it.

* In 2017, almost 17 million U.S. consumers experienced identity fraud - the unauthorised use of personal information, such as credit card data, for financial gain.

* Data breaches carried out by hackers are expected to go up 22 percent annually, exposing some 146 billion records, including personal information such as name, address and credit card numbers by 2023.

* Data breaches cost companies worldwide almost $4 million on average for every incident.


(Sources: UNCTAD, European Union, Javelin Strategy, IBM, Verizon, Yubico, Kaspersky Lab, CIGI-Ipsos)


(Reporting by Umberto Bacchi @UmbertoBacchi, Editing by Jason Fields. Please credit the Thomson Reuters Foundation, the charitable arm of Thomson Reuters, that covers humanitarian news, women's and LGBT+ rights, human trafficking, property rights, and climate change. Visit http://news.trust.org)

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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