52% Indian adults don’t know how to protect themselves from cybercrime: survey
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As per the analysis 7 in 10 Indian adults (70%) imagine that distant work has made it a lot simpler for hackers and cybercriminals to benefit from folks
52% adults admitted that they don’t know how to protect themselves from cybercrime, in accordance to a survey by on-line safety options supplier NortonLifeLock. 59% of adults in India turned victims of cybercrime up to now 12 months.
The ‘2021 Norton Cyber Safety Insights Report’, primarily based on the analysis carried out on-line by The Harris Poll amongst 10,030 adults in ten nations, together with 1,000 adults in India, additionally discovered that cybercrime victims collectively spent 1.3 billion hours making an attempt to resolve these points.
“In a year of lockdowns and restrictions, cybercriminals have not been deterred. More Indian adults fell victim to identity theft in the past 12 months and most are concerned about data privacy,” Ritesh Chopra, Director Sales and Field Marketing, India & SAARC Countries, NortonLifeLock, mentioned.
He added that whereas the report means that many Indian customers (90%) are taking proactive steps to safeguard their knowledge, 2 in 5 nonetheless really feel it’s unimaginable to protect their privateness (42%) on this age or say they don’t know how to achieve this (42%).
As per the analysis 7 in 10 Indian adults (70%) imagine that distant work has made it a lot simpler for hackers and cybercriminals to benefit from folks. About two-thirds (66%) mentioned that they’re extra apprehensive than ever earlier than of being a sufferer of a cybercrime. Similarly, 63% of Indian adults responded that they really feel extra weak to cybercrime than they did earlier than the COVID-19 pandemic started.
“Despite these vulnerabilities around half [52%] say they do not know how to protect themselves from cybercrime, and even more [68%] say it is difficult for them to determine if the information they see online is from a credible source,” it added.
Over 2 in 5 Indian customers (45%) have skilled id theft, with 14% impacted up to now 12 months alone (up from 10% in 2019), which implies over 27 million Indian adults skilled id theft up to now 12 months, the corporate mentioned in an announcement.
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