Santa Fe New Mexican

Poll: Little trust in online security

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Most Americans don’t believe their personal informatio­n is secure online and aren’t satisfied with the federal government’s efforts to protect it, according to a poll.

The poll by the Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research and MeriTalk shows 64 percent of Americans say their social media activity is not very or not at all secure. About as many have the same security doubts about online informatio­n revealing their physical location. Half of Americans believe their private text conversati­ons lack security.

And they’re not just concerned. They want something done about it. Nearly three-quarters of Americans say they support establishi­ng national standards for how companies can collect, process and share personal data.

“What is surprising to me is that there is a great deal of support for more government action to protect data privacy,” said Jennifer Benz, deputy director of the AP-NORC Center. “And it’s bipartisan support.”

But after years of stalled efforts toward stricter data privacy laws that could hold big companies accountabl­e for all the personal data they collect and share, the poll also indicates that Americans don’t have much trust in the government to fix it.

A majority, 56 percent, puts more faith in the private sector than the federal government to handle security and privacy improvemen­ts, despite years of highly publicized privacy scandals and hacks of U.S. corporatio­ns from Target to Equifax that exposed the personal informatio­n of millions of people around the world.

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