Digital privacy dilemma: 73% of users in Saudi Arabia do not post photos with spouses and partners
According to the Digital Superstitions survey by Kaspersky*, more than half of the respondents in Saudi Arabia (73%) do not post photos with their partners or spouses on social networks. Kaspersky is shedding light on how users feel about posting photos with their loved ones.
Posting personal photos on social media can have certain negative consequences. Due to data breaches, photos can get accessible to unintended audiences, risking personal information exposure. Cybercriminals might use photos to gather information for identity theft or phishing attacks. Location data embedded in photos can even compromise physical security by revealing a user’s whereabouts.
Users provide different reasons for refraining from posting photos with their loved ones. In most cases (61%) people do not want anyone to know about their personal life. Every eighth (16%) respondent does not like how they look on the photos. 24% of respondents said that their partner does not want the joint photos shared publicly (men voiced this opinion more often than women). Apart from that, 25% of people surveyed are afraid that they or their relationships may get jinxed if photos are shared publicly.
To ensure that posting photos on social networks brings only joy, Kaspersky recommends:
do not upload photos with confidential data, such as scans of documents;
do not share information about your friends and family members on social networks if the account is public;
check your privacy settings on social networks: it is better to keep your profile private and add people you know personally as friends;
use strong and different passwords for each account, change them periodically, and use password managers to create and store them;
set up two-factor authentication in those services that allow it;
do not transfer data about other people without their consent to third parties.