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New research reveals scale of damage to customer confidence that privacy breaches can cause

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LONDONApril 18, 2013 /PRNewswire/ -- A global study of consumer attitudes towards company stewardship of personal data conducted by the Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU) shows that data breaches can cause major damage to the business of the companies affected.
The study, written by the EIU and entitled "Privacy Uncovered: Can private life exist in the digital age?", was sponsored by Beazley. It reflects the views of more than 750 consumers around the world, exploring in detail the link between trends in privacy and data security with businesses' use of consumer data. The EIU's report also includes commentary from regulators and business leaders on the study's findings.
More than 32% of respondents in the study said they "strongly agreed" with the statement that, in the event of a data breach, they would cease to do business with the organisation concerned. When they were asked whether they had personally suffered a data breach in the past two years, 23% of respondents said they had. Describing how they had reacted to a breach, 38% said they no longer did business with the organisation concerned "because of the data breach."
"Consumers clearly feel very strongly about the perceived betrayal of trust that a data breach represents," said Paul Bantick , who heads Beazley's Technology, Media and Business Services team in London. "The ripple effects can be very wide – the EIU research also found that 46% of respondents that had suffered a data breach had advised friends and family to be careful of sharing data with the organisation.
"There appears to be a strong willingness not just to cease doing business with a company that loses your data but to tell your family and friends about it – so there's a clear multiplier effect in terms of the reputational damage that can be inflicted," said Mr Bantick.
Regulation poorly understood
The study also revealed widespread unease about the stringency of regulation concerning the misuse of customer data. More than 70% of respondents in Europe and the US said that regulation was not strong enough, as did 69% of respondents in Asia. Incentives for businesses to protect personal data were seen as inadequate by nearly 70% of respondents, with little variation among European, American and Asian respondents.
"It is clear that one of the biggest problems is transparency and complexity," Nellie Kroes , the European Commissioner for the Digital Agenda in Europe, is quoted in the report as saying. "People may even be protected [legally], but may not know because [the regulations or contracts] are too complex."
The European Commission is seeking to strengthen regulation in this area and has proposed the adoption throughout the European Union of a General Data Protection Regulation to make the rights and protections of citizens clearer.
Confidence in data security varies depending on organisation holding data
The EIU study suggests that perceptions of data security at various organizations vary widely. For example, only 10.6% of respondents thought their data "very secure" with online retailers, versus 17.2% with healthcare providers such as doctors and hospitals, and 17.6% with the government or government agencies. By a large margin, the most secure organisations were perceived to be banks and other financial institutions, with more than 41% of respondents perceiving them as "very secure," 49.8% as "moderately secure," and only 6.6% as "not secure at all."
"We keep on hearing how banks in the US and Europe have lost consumers' trust," said Mr Bantick. "In some respects that may be the case, but when it comes to stewardship of private customer data the research suggests they still enjoy a far higher level of trust than other organisations."
For further information, please contact:
Beazley Group
Tom Christie – Tel: 020 7674 7222
Email: tom.christie@beazley.com
Notes to editors:
About Beazley
Beazley plc (BEZ.L), is the parent company of specialist insurance businesses with operations in Europe, the US, Asia andAustralia. Beazley manages five Lloyd's syndicates and, in 2012, underwrote gross premiums worldwide of $1,895.9 million. All Lloyd's syndicates are rated A by A.M. Best.
Beazley is a leading insurer of network security and privacy risks, offering a range of solutions designed to reduce or extinguish the impact of liabilities arising from a data breach or from cyber crime. Beazley's products include Beazley Breach Response (BBR), a unique insurance, loss control and risk mitigation service that provides a comprehensive service to notify and protect customers of policyholders that have suffered a data breach.
For more information please go to: www.beazley.com
SOURCE Beazley plc


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