If you are worried about how your personal information and data are used, you are not alone.

According to a new KPMG survey U.S. consumers are becoming increasingly concerned with, and distrustful of, how companies use, manage and protect their data.

The survey revealed 56 percent of Americans reported wanting more control over their data and insisted that both corporations and government must play an active role in protecting consumer data.

Ninety-seven percent of American consumers indicated that data privacy is important to them, with 87 percent characterizing it as a human right. However, consumers are deeply suspicious of what companies are doing with their data: 68 percent don’t trust companies to ethically sell personal data, and 54 percent don’t trust companies to use personal data ethically, according to a news release.

“With consumers indicating that they see data privacy as a human right, and new legislation expected in the years ahead, companies must begin to mature privacy programs and policies,” said Orson Lucas, principal, KPMG Cyber Security Services in the release. “Consumer demands for the ethical use of data and increased control over their data must be a core consideration in developing data privacy policies and practices.

Very Risky Business

Although respondents indicated that data privacy is important to them, most Americans still engage in online behaviors they consider risky. The survey found that:

—   About 75 percent of Americans say they consider it risky to use the same password for multiple accounts, use public Wi-Fi, or save a card to a website or online store. Yet, more than 40 percent engage in those behaviors.

—   While 65 percent of Americans reported avoiding opening email attachments from unknown senders, only 31 percent install mobile device security software and 20 percent use their virtual private network (VPN) when possible.

“Part of the challenge for corporations will be getting employees and customers to do their part in protecting their data,” said Steve Stein, principal, KPMG Cyber Security Services.  “Developing defensible notices with understandable language and data protection controls that guide employees and consumers have to be embedded in the data security agenda.”

While most survey respondents indicated that consumers themselves have a responsibility to protect consumer data, even more, want the government and companies to play a role. KPMG found that:

—   Nine in 10 Americans insist on companies (91%) and the government (90%) have a responsibility to protect consumer data.

—   Almost all (91%) agree the following data privacy rights of the California Consumer Privacy Act should be extended to all U.S. Citizens: the right to delete personal data, and the right to know how their data is being used.

—   More than nine in 10 Americans say companies should put data privacy guidelines and policies in place, be held responsible for corporate data breaches, take corporate data responsibility seriously, and take the lead in establishing corporate data responsibility.

To be able to provide consumers with increased control over their data, businesses should consider leveraging data discovery and protection tools, and exploring novel uses of blockchain, and artificial intelligence. These technologies can help organizations better track the source of their data, assure its accuracy, make it easily discoverable, protect it, and build greater external visibility into the data being collected. In fact, according to a survey of 600 global technology executives conducted in late March/early April, KPMG found that improving cybersecurity and data privacy is one of the top four objectives for which their organizations are investing in emerging technologies such as process automation, smart analytics, cloud computing, artificial intelligence, and blockchain, the news release stated.

About the survey: The findings in the New Imperative for Corporate Data Responsibility report are based on the results from a survey of 1,000 respondents in the U.S. The sample was balanced to reflect the national representation of age, race, gender, and region. The online survey was fielded between May 19, 2020, and May 21, 2020.

Source:  KPMG LLP