Lost trust on internet
What happens when people lose trust
in the Internet?
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By: BHUPENDER
The Research Centre has
found that fewer people believe that “the Internet has been mostly a good thing
for society” as compared to four years ago. This worsening perspective on the
social benefits of the Internet contrasts with the view that these same respondents
believed that the Internet continued to be a good thing for them individually.
Experts are even more pessimistic when it comes to the Internet. They not only
see the decreasing social benefits of the Internet, but 32% of experts also
felt that people’s well-being would be more harmed than helped by the Internet.
The
dark side of the network:-
Those who held the view
that the Internet was overall not a good thing for society cited the fact that
people spent too much time on their devices and were being isolated by the
Internet rather than brought together. The growth of fake news and false
information was another concern expressed by those with a negative view of the
social benefits of the Internet. Interestingly, diminishing privacy was only a
concern for a small number of those surveyed.
The association between the
use of the Internet and a negative social impact has been documented for some
time. A 1998 study by researchers from Carnegie Mellon University
found that increased use of the Internet was associated with statistically significant
declines in social involvement and increases in loneliness. A 2015 study found that there was a strong association
between the amount of time spent on Facebook with symptoms of depression.
It is not necessarily the
case that social media and the Internet in general causes loneliness or
decreases social interactions. However, people who are lonely can
potentially escape from social interactions by spending more time on
the Internet.
However, many of these
studies were done prior to the rise in fake news and the pervasive problems of trolls and bad
behaviour on social networks, especially Twitter. It is also clear that a broad
question about “the Internet” masks the global public’s concerns about specific
issues with online life and with particular platforms.
In a large 2018 survey of
Internet users in 25 countries conducted by CIGI-Ipsos, over 30% reported that
social media made their lives worse and 63% said that social media companies
“have too much power”.
The consequence of this was
that people reported to be changing their behaviour online, being more
defensive with e-mail, sites visited, increasing security measures and engaging
in less activity overall online, including the sharing of personal information.
12% of the people surveyed claimed that they were making fewer online
purchases. This in turn has a large impact on the digital economy as a whole
because the entire system depends on there being a base level of trust of the
online public.
The economic impact of
the loss of confidence:-
The responsibility for the
overall level of trust in the online environment lays in large part with
cybercriminals and the larger Internet companies and less so with the government.
In the CIGI-Ipsos survey, cybercriminals and Internet companies were the two
leading sources of concern with respect to online privacy and more than 80% of
people surveyed were concerned about cybercrime in general.
For governments, it is
clear that maintaining trust in the digital economy is a prime concern. For
starters, the digital economy is often the fastest-growing part of a country’s
economy. In the United States, the digital economy has been growing on average at three times the rate of the overall
economy over the last 10 years and now contributes over 6% of the total GDP.
In France that number is just 5% but to illustrate how
important it could be, China’s digital economy represents 30% of its GDP.
Clearly, the importance of
a country’s digital economy is not the focus or overriding concern to
individual Internet firms, especially if they are based elsewhere. Ironically,
companies such as Facebook and Google can negatively impact a country’s digital
economy by eroding trust in the Internet, even as they avoid paying taxes
outside the countries in which they’re based – and sometimes even within the countries they’re based.
At present, there are few
incentives for such companies to act in the interests of the digital economy as
a whole. The European Union has started creating regulation around privacy
through the General Data Protection Regulation and proposed taxes (GDPR) on the turnover of online services.
The potential for large
fines from the GDPR has had some impact on the behaviour of companies like
Facebook with regard to privacy. The ongoing threat of increased taxes has led
to a slew of tech companies proposing various projects and concessions to French President Emmanuel
Macron recently. These concessions are oriented more at lobbying the government,
however, and not doing what they should be doing which is increasing the trust
of the public.
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