10/21/2024 | News release | Archived content
Trusting government to protect data
We asked all respondents about government-issued digital ID to gauge their level of trust in the government to safeguard important personal information. The comfort level with a government-issued digital ID was highest in North America with 65% saying they would be comfortable or extremely comfortable, while the numbers were significantly lower in Asia-Pacific (41%) and Europe (28%).
Meanwhile, more than half (56%) of business leaders overall said they were confident or extremely confident in the government's ability to put the proper regulation in place to protect personal online data.
The numbers were a bit higher in North America (69%) than they were in Europe (50%) or Asia-Pacific (48%). Age was a significant factor in this finding: 59% of executives over the age of 50 said they would be comfortable to extremely comfortable compared to just 32% of those under 50.
Top challenges to data privacy compliance
Finally, when we asked executives about their company's biggest challenges complying with privacy regulations, the top 3 challenges were:
Maintaining an effective control environment amid emerging threats
Identifying all internal systems that contain personal data
Dealing with different and sometimes conflicting data privacy regimes
Regionally, in North America, the top challenge was "dealing with different and sometimes conflicting data privacy regimes." In Asia-Pacific, it was "maintaining an effective control environment among emerging threats." Interestingly, Europe's top challenge-"training staff in light of the quickly evolving landscape"-wasn't even among the top 3 challenges overall.
And when we asked them what aspect of their customer data gave them the most concern, the top three concerns overall were: how it's collected, how it's used and how it's stored. These concerns were ranked the same in Europe and Asia-Pacific but in North America, the top concern was how data is used, followed by how it's stored and how it's collected.