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Poll: Few Trust Social Media with Private Data

From their vantage point in the cradle of high tech, Bay Area voters deeply distrust social media companies with their personal and financial information and favor government regulation of Internet privacy and security more than the rest of the country, according to a new poll.

From their vantage point in the cradle of high tech, Bay Area voters deeply distrust social media companies with their personal and financial information and favor government regulation of Internet privacy and security more than the rest of the country, according to a new poll.

The poll found that current and former technology workers and conservatives were less supportive of more government regulation of online data stewardship than liberals and those unconnected to the tech industry. But respondent Andrew Randall, 24, a San Francisco Democrat, said that his work in the technology industry makes him more inclined toward government regulation.

"I know what they do and how the information is leveraged," Randall said. "I could guarantee that people wouldn't want their data leveraged if they knew how it was being used."

Just 17 percent of voters in Santa Clara, San Mateo, San Francisco, Alameda and Contra Costa counties trust social media companies such as Menlo Park's Facebook and San Francisco's Twitter to keep their personal and financial data secure, according to the poll conducted on behalf of the Silicon Valley Leadership Group and the Bay Area News Group. Considering the poll respondents' tech savvy — a characteristic apparent in other survey results — their skepticism underscores the self-inflicted damage wrought by the industry's recent run of shoddy data practices and poor consumer relations.

"As an industry, they have some work to do in restoring trust and confidence," said David Metz of Fairbank, Maslin, Maullin, Metz and Associates, who conducted the poll last month.

More than four in five Bay Area voters — 86 percent — are concerned about the security of their online personal and financial information, the poll found, and 67 percent have had their data compromised. More than half — 51 percent — said government should do more to regulate how companies use consumers' information.

"It reflects a depth of concern that isn't common to every issue," Metz said. "For most members of the public, this isn't something where they were whipped up by reading stories in the media. They feel at risk because they've had their data breached."

The poll comes amid an effort to qualify a California ballot measure that would require companies doing business in the state to tell consumers what personal information they collect from them and stop selling it upon request. It would also make companies more accountable for data breaches.

It's no accident that these efforts are underway in California. Distrust in the rest of the country has been slow to catch up. A national Reuters poll in March found that 41 percent trusted social media's biggest brand, Facebook, with their personal information, and that 46 percent of adults wanted more government regulation of how companies use personal and financial data.

Security breaches are affecting all sorts of companies that have left consumers vulnerable to identity theft and fraud or exposed personal information that they had assumed would be kept private.

In March, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg said the company failed its users after reports that British political consulting firm Cambridge Analytica had harvested up to 87 million Facebook user profiles without their consent.

But it was only the latest in a steady drumbeat of data breaches: Uber (November, 57 million users), Yahoo (October, 3 billion users), Equifax (September, 148 million users), Myspace (May 2016, 360 million users), LinkedIn (May 2016, 100 million users), Anthem (February 2015, 80 million users), Target (November 2013, 145 million users), JP Morgan Chase (September 2014, 83 million users).

The Silicon Valley Leadership Group, which represents major Silicon Valley technology companies, opposes the proposed privacy ballot measure, arguing it goes "too far" and lacked industry input.

Late last week, lawmakers in Sacramento proposed a bill that could substitute the privacy ballot measure while addressing some industry concerns about liability. The leadership group has not taken a position on the bill.

Most Bay Area voters had taken steps to protect their data, including 69 percent creating stronger passwords, 57 percent requesting a free credit check, 54 percent regularly changing their passwords and 51 percent changing privacy settings on their social media accounts.

(c)2018 the San Jose Mercury News. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.