Net News
Web Users Say They Still Don't Trust Net Privacy

By Art Kramer
STAFF WRITER

The most frequently cited reason why Web users refuse to supply personal information requested on Web sites is that they don't know how the information will be used, a new survey reports.

Seven in 10 Web users who refused to give information or gave false information did so because of this fear, according to the sixth GVU's 6th WWW Survey of Web users, compiled by the Georgia Institute of Technology.
"Data privacy issues are the ones we see the most concern about," said Georgia Tech graduate student Colleen Kehoe. "We see it mentioned more and more often online. In this survey we really wanted to clarify some of the answers we got last time. We wanted to find out why people aren't registering on Web sites. We found that most people don't trust the entities that are collecting the information."
Kehoe and Jim Pitkow, also a Tech grad student, probed for more detail about why more than one in four Web users in the last survey said they have supplied misleading personal information on Web sites.
The survey drew more than 14,000 responses in the latest round, conducted in October and November.
Other findings from the survey, which will be released today: More Web users are paying for access: 66 percent compared with 57 percent in the last survey. Most others get onto the Net at school or on the job.
And the answer we've all been waiting for: The Web likes Letterman better than Leno, 3 7percent to 14 percent.
Some pollsters have criticized the survey because respondents are not contacted at random. By gathering so many responses, the survey compensates for biases that might be introduced, Pitkow says.