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Canadian Reviewer

« Breaking news: Nokia N8 flagship smartphone hits UK in October | Main | Mobile browser face-off: Opera Mini vs Skyfire vs Safari vs Firefox vs Internet Explorer »
Wednesday
Sep082010

Symantec report: "Cybercrime Strikes More Than Two-Thirds of Internet Users"

The next time you surf the Internet, consider this: You might be just one click away from becoming the next cybercrime victim. A new study released today from security software maker Norton reveals the staggering prevalence of cybercrime: Two-thirds (65 percent) of Internet users globally have fallen victim to cybercrimes, including computer viruses, online credit card fraud and identity theft.

Lynn Hargrove (Director of Consumer Solutions, Symantec Canada) explains "Malware is increasing exponentially year over year."

The Norton Cybercrime Report: The Human Impact shines a light on the personal toll cybercrime takes. The first study to examine the emotional impact of cybercrime, it shows that globally victims’ strongest reactions are feeling angry (58 percent), annoyed (51 percent) and cheated (40 percent), and in many cases, they blame themselves for being attacked. Only 3 percent don’t think it will happen to them, and nearly 80 percent do not expect cybercriminals to be brought to justice— resulting in an ironic reluctance to take action and a sense of helplessness.

“We accept cybercrime because of a ‘learned helplessness’,” said Joseph LaBrie, PhD, associate professor of psychology at Loyola Marymount University. “It’s like getting ripped off at a garage – if you don’t know enough about cars, you don’t argue with the mechanic. People just accept a situation, even if it feels bad.”

Despite the emotional burden, the universal threat, and incidence of cybercrime, people still aren’t changing their behaviours - with only half (51 percent) of adults saying they would change their behaviour if they became a victim. Even scarier, fewer than half (44 percent) reported the crime to the police.

Canadian Findings

The Norton Cybercrime Report: The Human Impact polled Canadians and found 64 percent of respondents have fallen victim to some kind of online crime (53 percent received computer viruses/malware, nine percent responded to online scams, nine percent have been affected by online credit card fraud).

"99 per cent of Canadians fear they will be victimized," Hargrove pointed out but it is disturbing that the majority aren't taking steps to protect themselves better. Changing certain online habits like creating strong password, using a low-limit credit card for online purchases and using multiple email addresses for different online transactions can make a difference.

On average, it takes 17 days and costs CAD $582 to resolve a cybercrime in Canada. Compared to other countries, the process is fast – but the cost is higher. (Globally 28 days and US $334)

When it comes to behaviours online, Canadians are on par with other countries in their online ethics: 44 percent have lied about personal details online (45 percent globally), 31 percent have used a fake ID online (33 percent globally) and 20 percent have online regrets (22 percent globally). 

By contrast, some Canadian attitudes differ from the rest of the world.  Only one percent of Canadians do not expect to become a victim of cybercrime (3 percent globally), and Canadians are the most skeptical (57 percent) about restoring a damaged online reputation (45 percent globally).

The “human impact” aspect of the report delves further into the little crimes or white lies consumers perpetrate against friends, family, loved ones and businesses. Nearly half of respondents think it’s legal to download a single music track, album or movie without paying. Twenty-four percent believe it’s legal or perfectly okay to secretly view someone else’s e-mails or browser history.  Some of these behaviours, such as downloading files, open people up to additional security threats.

“To avoid becoming a victim of cybercrime change your passwords often and make sure they are a combination of letters and numbers,” said Lynn Hargrove, Director of Consumer Solutions, Symantec Canada. “Make sure you have a separate credit card for all your online transactions and keep your home computer secure by making sure it has an up-to-date security software.”

Today, Norton also released it’s comprehensive security software Norton Internet Security 2011  - honouring the company’s commitment to releasing only the fastest and lightest Internet security products on the market. 

The updated Norton Suite speeds up a number of processes while improving the scope of PC protection while having a smaller footprint and more efficient features.

Both Norton Internet Security and Norton AntiVirus 2011 are the only products to achieve a 100 percent protection score in a new third-party test from Dennis Labs[1].

 

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