Teens Actually Care About Online Privacy
CowboyRobot writes "According to a new report by Pew Research Center's Internet & American Life Project, more than half of American teenagers have steered clear of a mobile app due to worries about privacy. Some 56 percent of younger teens (ages 12 to 14) who use mobile apps avoid some apps after learning they had to share personal information to use it, while 49 percent of older teens (14 to 17) have. Also, teens who had at some point sought outside advice about privacy management were considerably more likely than those who had not sought advice to say that they had disabled location tracking features."
Just saying, slight bias in their conclusion.
Teen online privacy really only applies to Parents.
I'm happy with half. Most people are idiots. Nearly half of any group not being a total idiot has to count as a win.
Never really could reconcile this generation's seemingly blase attitude towards anonymity with my own generation's take on the internet. I was a teen when the internet became A Thing, and all us kids were completely fucking enamored with the anonymity. A place where we weren't judged by our age, merely by our worth? FUCKIN' A! Perfect!
Did they weigh that variable at all against what percentage of their peers used the app? To what extent do kids care about privacy in the face of peer pressure?
Facebook demands substantial personal information about you, but last I checked, it's still the most popular social networking app kids use.
I'm mostly unimpressed by the twee nonsense about kids these days being 'digital natives' or something, imbued with mysterious computer-using powers (sure, kids these days are almost all users, unlike older age brackets that have holdouts; but the bar is not high for 'using technology', thanks to years of dedicated UI polishing and idiot-proofing, so only the usual much smaller percentage of nerds have any reason to go beyond trivial levels of knowledge); but it seems perfectly reasonable that they'd be a relatively privacy-conscious group.
After all, kids are among the demographics most likely to be surveilled and to be punished or otherwise restricted based on that surveillance. Parents, teachers/admins, peers, present or near-future employers and college admissions officers, cops (whether they just come and break up that party you foolishly put on facebook or whether you are already familiar with being stop-and-frisked depends on other demographic variables, of course), all actively watching and frequently acting on that.
Adults are still pretty heavily watched; but the range of banal behavior they can engage in without consequence is substantially greater.
It's "You're a pal and a confidant", not "cosmonaut". lol
What kind of a fucktard starts off a story with "teens actually care about online privacy"! Like it was no big deal until they found some people that had half a brain and do not like where the online world is headed. Who cares what fucking age they are?
It only takes participation in one of these invasive networks to lose your privacy. 'apps', facebook, whatever.. it's all the same. The only winning move is not to play.
of the reddit "enhancement" suite upgrade because it suddenly wanted access to history and tabs.
Been using it for a while until then, but now I dropped it. So it happens.
... most kids are tech illiterate. To have any real privacy you have to understand the technology and what it's implications are and most average people will never grasp how easy it is for people to get your information if you use any technology at all.
most of their life they post on facebook
Don't forget about us pedophiles.
In human terms a generation is around plus twenty years. The internet about twenty years ago didn't have Google or Facebook. On /. the big concern was how completely insecure windows 95 was. There was a bit of chatter about privacy but it wasn't front and centre. The next generation has grown up on the internet and with social networking. It may be privacy will become the next way to show how cool you are. Who knows, crazy kids.... we can only hope.
... and then the "oooh shiney" Apple steps in and their brains explode.
They care about it because Google's app store shows them what permissions the app requires, then they jump to shortsighted conclusions. I once had someone email me some insulting words because my application kept track of the phone state in an attempt to reconnect gracefully after a call on CDMA carries. I guarantee the ~50% of teenagers who have not used an app because of privacy concerns have a Facebook account.
.. they clearly have something to hide. Since all their secrets are hidden in the phone you kind of want to trust the phone to hold your secrets.
but we all know more than 3/4 of them never bother changing the privacy settings or pretty much share all their lives on facebook or twitter to begin with.
When you tell me the percentage if teens NOT using Facebook, then your research has credibility that kids are actually worried about privacy.
I'd say that GPS tracking concern is about physical threat AND lack of vehicle.
consumers should never be told how much information is being taken
... avoid some apps after learning they had to share personal information to use it ...
After all, both Apple & Google hand over all of your info to the NSA.
Every kid these days has a social media portfolio (doesn't matter if its Facebook,twitter,instagram it adult friend finder). Slashdot community and kids have very different views of privacy, slashdot is more concerned with protecting data from corporations and governments (lurks,pgp,etc.) while kids are more concerned with protecting data from individuals (snapchat,password protected phones,etc.). Keep that in mind when taking in this article. I'm barely an adult myself and a year ago when I was in high school nobody but a small handful (5 or so in a school of 1000) actually understood the implications of data being stored by other parties and actively fought against them. While its not a popular view its refreshing to know that I expanded the understanding of controlling your own personal data to the staff and other students.
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Being that Bea Arthur looks a lot like Brezhnev, cosmonaut is correct.
Teens don't even look at privacy and security. They just want fun and free. Get real.
Some 56 percent of younger teens (ages 12 to 14) who use mobile apps avoid some apps after learning they had to share personal information to use it
More like "I have to type all that information in to make an account? Fuck that... it sounds like too much effort!"
Right, they are aware of privacy concerns when it comes to mobile. But what about cloud services like Gmail? Are theses kids paying attention to who is handling their communications and documents, and what is done here?
The problem becomes (and another reason these study groups are idiots) how many are into something illegal, or something they do not want there parents/teachers, ect to find out?
The percentage number after that is extremely low, so this study is more then misleading. However it does show they are aware of privacy concerns, just by the apps the refuse to download, and those however, maybe apps that could expose more of what they are up too.
Just recently, when I went to use the tom tom app on an iPhone to navigate to a contact. It displayed a popup that asked for permission to share your contacts. I refused permission and it removed the previously working navigate to contacts option. Clearly this is just spite as it's not necessary to share your contacts to navigate to it. I don't use navigate to contacts now but if I knew about this behavior before I had bought it I would never buy this app. That's just plain evil and spiteful and nasty.
DON''T buy tom tom navigator!!!!
Adults concerned about privacy are generally concerned about snooping by their government and by corporations. Teens concerned about privacy are more likely concerned about Mom and Dad, or their peers. I suppose I should just be glad they're concerned about it at all.
Study finds teenagers are in fact human, care about technology and it's effects as much as "normal" humans.