A whopping 96 percent of Indians put personal information at risk while using public Wi-Fi for checking bank s, sharing personal photos and videos, a report by Norton by Symantec said on Tuesday. 1q5e6i
According to the 'Norton Wi-Fi Risk Report 2017' by Symantec, consumers are unable to resist a strong, free Wi-Fi network and their online behaviour may be placing their personal information at risk.
"There is a deep divide between what people think is safe when it comes to using public Wi-Fi versus the reality," said Ritesh Chopra, Country Manager, Consumer Business Unit, Symantec, in a statement.
"What someone thinks are private on their personal device can easily be accessed by cyber criminals through unsecure Wi-Fi Networks or even apps with privacy vulnerabilities," he added.
The report says that 73 percent of Indians will do or swap something for a strong Wi-Fi signal including watching a three minute ment (35 percent), to something as critical as allowing access to personal emails (19 percent), personal photographs (22 percent), online dating profiles (16 percent), lists (19 percent) and giving permission to access and even edit personal social media profiles (19 percent).
The survey also revealed that 31 percent Indians use public Wi-Fi for viewing explicit or suggestive contents, of which 44 percent it to doing so at work and 49 percent in hotels.
The survey, which included more than 15,000 consumers in 15 countries, noted that almost half (48 percent) of Indian s have accessed Wi-Fi without the Wi-Fi network owner's permission.
The report provides certain measures to ensure security over the web which includes using Virtual Private Network (VPN) and looking for 'HTTPS' (Hypertext Transfer Protocol Secure) in the web addresses while visiting a website.