this post was submitted on 24 Aug 2024
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This survey was conducted among 5,101 U.S. adults from May 15 to 21, 2023

% say they are concerned about how ... use(s) the data they collect about them

  • Companies: 81%
  • The government: 71%

% say they have little to no understanding about what ... do(es) with the data they collect about them

  • Companies: 67%
  • The government: 77%

% say they have very little or no trust at all that leaders of social media companies will

  • Publicly admit mistakes and take responsibility when they misuse or compromises users' personal data: 77%
  • Not sell users' personal data to others without their consent: 76%
  • Be held accountable by the government if they misuse or compromise users' personal data: 71%

% say that as companies use AI to collect and analyze personal information, this information will be used in ways that ...

  • People would not be comfortable with: 81%
  • Were not originally intended: 80%
  • Could make people's lives easier: 62%

% say that when they think about managing their privacy online, they ...

  • Trust themselves to make the right decisions about their personal information: 78%
  • Feel skeptical that anything they do will make much difference: 61%
  • Feel overwhelmed by figuring out what they need to do: 37%
  • Feel privacy is not that big of a deal to them: 29%
  • Are confident those who have access to their personal information will do what is right: 21%

% say they ... agree to online privacy policies right away, without reading what the policies say

  • Always, almost always or often: 56%
  • Sometimes: 22%
  • Rarely or never: 18%
  • No answer: 4%

Please read the report for a more in-depth look at the data and analysis!

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[–] conciselyverbose@sh.itjust.works 24 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

% say that when they think about managing their privacy online, they ...

  • Trust themselves to make the right decisions about their personal information: 78%

That implies we get to make decisions.

Yeah, especially everything now is in the hands of so few players, we don't have much of a choice!

[–] chiisana@lemmy.chiisana.net 11 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

I like how OP calls out several stats to appeal to Lemmy’s overzealous privacy focus, but does not call out the reported fact that Republicans are increasingly paranoid about being tracked, whereas the Democrats stayed apathetic about it.

This article just shows that by and large, people don’t know what and why data are being collected, and unless they believe in the deep state conspiracy that’s being touted by the Republicans in the past several years by, they mostly don’t care.

¯\_(ツ)_/¯

Conservatives talk up a big game about online privacy and online censorship, but they consistently fail to use privacy enabling, censorship-resistant solutions.

Go check out any of their online spaces: mostly hosted behind cloudflare. They cozy up to AWS and other hosters that have shown no issue with pulling the rug out from underneath their feet.

It leads one to conclude that they must want to be persecuted online. Maybe its simply that conservatives feel better being able to say "I've been banned here, here and here, therefore we must be over the target."

[–] AsudoxDev@programming.dev 10 points 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago)

Most americans think they care about their privacy while entrusting their data to companies that supposedly "protect" their privacy.

*cough* Apple *cough*

Yet pretty much nobody does anything about it. For example:

  • Linux - it's too hard and won't run my favorite apps (you know, the apps that steal your data)
  • paid, encrypted email - who pays for email?
  • use Signal instead of SMS - but nobody uses it (of course they don't, because you aren't using it)
  • TVs - "dumb" TVs are inconvenient (well yeah, smart TVs want to snoop on your apps, so they'll making using apps through their UX easy)

And so on. They may say they care, but actions speak far louder than words. Take baby steps instead of just whining. I'm on a privacy journey, and so far I have:

  1. use Firefox - I use it mostly because I believe in an open web, so rendering engine diversity matters to me, but privacy is also really important
  2. switched to Duckduckgo - really easy, and the bangs are really nice
  3. use Linux full time - it's easier now than ever since games and many desktop apps just work on Linux
  4. use F-Droid for as much as possible on my Android phone
  5. switch to GrapheneOS on my Android phone - I needed a new phone anyway, so I picked up a Pixel
  6. switch to Tuta for email - Proton also works well, I just found Tuta to have the features I wanted
  7. switch all old logins to use my personal domain for email verification - if I ever dislike Tuta, switching is as easy as changing DNS settings (i.e. prevent myself from being locked-in)

And so on. Achieving privacy and maintaining it is a process, not a destination. Just start doing something to keep a bit of your data private.

[–] IsThisAnAI@lemmy.world 6 points 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago)

Menu of the questions are too broad and generic to be useful. Give concrete scenarios with clear terms and that numbers will drop on both sides.

EG "Google will throw me into an anonymous group and sell targeted ads, the data is not resold" vs "The US government will pull income information automatically on welfare to reduce fraud" will produce different answers and a whole lot more nuance.

[–] linearchaos@lemmy.world 2 points 2 weeks ago

Agree to online privacy policies...

It's take it or leave it and I want the software.

The worst thing that is probably in there that I would not want is binding arbitration.

You know, it would be kind of nice if there was some outline of the legalese in simplified English.

[–] 11111one11111@lemmy.world 1 points 2 weeks ago

They are polling very well informed pollees lol. I live in rural NY and it's 50/50 if someone my age (mid 30's) knows how to adjust permissions on their phone. People over 40... your lucky if they even own a computer or non-flip phone lol. Im being super hyperbolic but still these numbers feel like they polled IT departments.