OAIC releases attitudes survey results
The Office of the Australian Information Commissioner (OAIC) has released results from a major survey into privacy attitudes and experiences.
The ‘Australian Community Attitudes to Privacy Survey (ACAPS) 2023’ uncovered a sharp increase in the number of Australians who feel data breaches are the greatest privacy risk they face. The survey tested attitudes on topics such as data practices, privacy legislation, data breaches, biometrics, artificial intelligence and children’s privacy.
“Our survey shows privacy is a significant concern for Australians, especially in areas that have seen recent developments like artificial intelligence and biometrics,” said Australian Information Commissioner and Privacy Commissioner Angelene Falk.
“Australians see data breaches as the biggest privacy risk today, which is not surprising with almost half of those surveyed saying they were affected by a data breach in the prior year.
“There is a strong desire for organisations to do more to advance privacy rights, including minimising the amount of information they collect, taking extra steps to protect it and deleting it when no longer required.”
Among the key themes of the survey are:
- Australians care about their privacy. Nine in 10 Australians have a clear understanding of why they should protect their personal information, and 62% see the protection of their personal information as a major concern in their life.
- Australians don’t feel in control of their privacy and don’t know what to do about it. Only 32% feel in control of their privacy, and half believe if they want to use a service, they have no choice but to accept what the service does with their data. Three in five care about their data privacy, but don’t know what to do about it.
- Most Australians have had a negative privacy experience. 47% were told by an organisation that their personal information was involved in a data breach in the year prior, and three-quarters said they experienced harm because of a data breach.
- Australians have strong feelings about certain data practices. Nine in 10 are concerned about organisations sending customers’ information overseas. 96% want conditions in place before artificial intelligence is used to make decisions that might affect them.
- There are high levels of distrust. Only four sectors (health, federal government, finance and education) are more trusted than not by Australians to handle their personal information. Less than half of people trust organisations to only collect the information they need, use and share information as they say they will, store information securely, give individuals access to their information and delete information when no longer needed.
-
Australians want more to be done to protect privacy. 84% want more control and choice over the collection and use of their information. Around nine in 10 Australians would like businesses and government agencies to do more to protect their personal information.
Commissioner Falk said the survey has important signposts for organisations.
“The findings point to several areas where organisations can do more to build trust in the community,” she said.
“Not only is good privacy practice the right thing to do and what the community expects, it’s a precondition for the success of innovations that rely on personal information.”
The survey findings also show there is strong support for privacy law reform.
“We are at a pivotal moment for privacy in Australia, where we can seize the opportunity to ensure laws and practices uphold our fundamental human right to privacy,” Falk said.
“This is an opportunity to ensure the protections the community expects are reflected in the law.
“The OAIC will use the findings to inform our ongoing input into the review of the Privacy Act and to target our activities at areas of high concern among the community.”
The full report is available on the OAIC website: oaic.gov.au/acaps.
Key findings
- Three-quarters of Australians feel data breaches are one of the biggest privacy risks they face today. This has increased 13 percentage points since 2020.
- Seventy per cent of Australians place a high level of importance on their privacy when choosing a product or service. After quality and price, data privacy is the third most important factor when choosing a product or service.
- Australians trust health service providers the most and social media companies the least when it comes to the protection and use of their personal information.
- Only 42% of Australians feel most organisations they deal with are transparent about the way they use their personal information, and three in five don’t understand what organisations do with the information they collect.
- Over half of Australians consider having to share some personal information if they want to use a service fair enough. However, they generally only consider it fair and reasonable to provide their name (81%) and email address (77%) to organisations and, to a lesser extent, their phone number (68%), date of birth (62%) and physical address (61%).
- Protecting their child’s personal information is a major concern for 79% of parents. However, only half feel they are in control of their child’s data privacy. 85% of parents believe children must be empowered to use the internet and online services, but their data privacy must be protected.
Phishing-resistant MFA: elevating security standards in the public sector
Phishing remains a significant issue for government agencies, and current MFA solutions often...
Building secure AI: a critical guardrail for Australian policymakers
While AI has the potential to significantly enhance Australia's national security, economic...
Building security-centric AI: why it is key to the government's AI ambitions
As government agencies test the waters of AI, public sector leaders must consider how they can...