Melbourne and Amsterdam, 24 September 2011. AVG (AU/NZ) has announced that a new study by AVG Technologies comparing young adults (18-25 year olds) in Australia, the US and UK shows that most are not taking adequate security precautions when it comes to securing their social network profiles.
AVG’s study was commissioned to highlight the dangers of ‘status jacking’, the practice of hijacking status updates on social networks, which is particularly prevalent among students and the under 25s.
The research shows the degree to which young adults in all three countries secure the devices that they use to access social networks – PCs/laptops, mobile devices, and handhelds such as iPads.
The results show that:
While most 18-25 year olds (78%) secure their laptops with a password, less than half (48.3%) password protect their mobiles. This figure drops to 41% in the US. Among British young adults, only 50% secure their mobiles with a password while in Australia just over half (54%) do.
Barely quarter (25%) put any kind of password security on their handheld devices, such as iPads or Blackberrys..For the UK, 21% do, while for the US (26%) and Australia (27%) the figures are slightly better.
Most under 25s are aware of the need to use different passwords across different social networks. In Australia 75%.of young adults use different passwords, while for the UK and US the figure is 72%.
Unfortunately, four in ten (39.6%) across the UK (42%), Australia (42%) share their passwords with friends and family. In the US, the figure is over one in three (35%).
Over one in ten young adults in Australia (15%) and the UK (12%) have accidentally downloaded a virus via a social network. In the UK the figure is 9%.
Overall, young women are less careful about security than young men. 42% of women under 25 share their passwords compared to 28% of men. Meanwhile, while 81% of men under 25 password protect their laptops and PCs, a quarter (26%) of women don’t bother to do so.
Peter Cameron, Managing Director of AVG (AU/NZ), says that it is concerning that many people share passwords.
“The fact that most young adults secure their laptops and PCs is positive news, but the most worrying statistic is that four in ten share their passwords, something we do not advise doing.
“Sharing your passwords can leave your social networks open to status jacking and leaves your other online accounts, such as banking, vulnerable to attack.”
He adds that youngsters should secure their handheld and mobile devices as more and more people are accessing social networks via these devices, especially the under 25s.
“You only have to walk away from your mobile for a few minutes for someone to access your email, download your contacts, and to masquerade as you on a social network.”
Status Jacking video
AVG has put together a video featuring UK comedienne Holly Burns, which guides students and young adults through the dangers of status jacking in a light hearted, but informative, manner.
The video is available to view at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iHwyArx2YDQ
ENDS
Methodology
Research Now conducted the survey among 1000+ 18-25 year olds across Australia, the US, Japan, the UK and the Czech Republic in the first week of September.
Further resources about this story are available as follows:
AVG Blog post – AVG survey shows that most youngsters don’t take adequate security precautions
About AVG (AU/NZ) Pty Ltd — www.avg.com.au
Based in Melbourne, AVG (AU/NZ) Pty Ltd distributes the AVG range of Anti-Virus and Internet Security products in Australia, New Zealand and the South Pacific. AVG software solutions provide complete real-time protection against the malware, viruses, spam, spyware, adware, worms, Trojans, phishing and exploits used by cyber-criminals, hackers, scammers and identity thieves. AVG protects everything important and personal inside computers — documents, account details and passwords, music, photos and more — all while allowing users to work, bank, shop and play games online in safety.
AVG provides outstanding technical solutions and exceptional value for consumers, small to medium business and enterprise clients. AVG delivers always-on, always up-to-date protection across desktop, and notebook PCs, plus file and e-mail servers in the home and at work in SMBs, corporations, government agencies and educational institutions.