‘81% of Indian users feel hesitant while using some apps’  

The report reveals that owing to the pandemic, Internet usage across Indian households has spiked by 50 per cent and has also fostered awareness about cyber frauds across 61 per cent of the households

Representative Image (IANS)
Representative Image (IANS)
user

IANS

The focus on right to privacy in public discourse has prompted 81 per cent of Indian Internet users to stop using or considering not using certain apps due to privacy or data-sharing concerns, a new report said on Monday.

The report reveals that owing to the pandemic, Internet usage across Indian households has spiked by 50 per cent and has also fostered awareness about cyber frauds across 61 per cent of the households.

"The pandemic has accelerated the penetration of Internet-based services and has consequently had a profound impact on the level of comfort people have with the use of the Internet," Lavanya Chandan, Director, OLX India, said in a statement.

"Our study shows a remarkable shift in online behaviour among Indian Internet users which has resulted from an increased sensitisation, and this has prompted the adoption of basic tools to address concerns around privacy and safety," Chandan added, in the third edition of the annual report titled 'OLX 2021 Safer Internet Day Study'.

When it comes to tackling misinformation, 45 per cent of users responded that they now verify any news or information shared online, the report said.


The pandemic has led to a surge in Internet usage across Indian households with 58 per cent of the respondents indicating that all members in their families access the Internet frequently.

In the survey, 15 per cent of the respondents said that the primary users of the Internet in their household were the elderly members and the most common use cases of Internet usage during the pandemic have been working from home, social media usage and online shopping by 64 per cent of the respondents.

For the survey, OLX studied the behaviour of 6000 Indian Internet users.

Of theses, 73 per cent were millennials between the age groups of 18-37 while 23 per cent were non-millennials above the age of 37. Fifty three per cent of the respondents were from metro cities while 47 per cent of the respondents were from non-metro cities across India.

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