Boomers better than Millennials and GenZ?

Millennials are twice as likely to reuse their passwords on various shopping sites, leaving them vulnerable to account breaches during a busy holiday shopping season.

  • 1 year ago Posted in

Yubico has published the results of the company’s 2023 survey, ‘In a growing era of sophisticated phishing attacks, have people adjusted their cybersecurity hygiene?’ conducted by OnePoll. OnePoll, a leading provider of international market research and data communication solutions, surveyed 2,000 consumers* in the United States and the United Kingdom.

The purpose of this study is to understand attitudes and perceptions from consumers on cybersecurity across the US and UK, with a particular focus on how different age demographics fare in protecting themselves online. Additionally, the survey aimed to learn if consumers are concerned about protecting their online accounts, and if so, how they are protecting them.

"While it is technically easy for retailers to implement basic username and password authentication for their customers, these types of credentials alone are easy for attackers to circumvent, allowing unauthorised access to online accounts," said Ben Eichorst, director of infrastructure security at Yubico. "During busy online shopping months, consumers may be tempted to adopt risky habits such as reusing passwords across services, or clicking on order information links that appear legitimate. These kinds of behaviours put consumers at a higher risk for their accounts to be compromised."

Key findings from the research indicate that:

• While 80 percent of survey respondents are concerned about cybersecurity when it comes to their online accounts, 39 percent admitted to using the same passwords for multiple accounts

• Boomers are the least likely to reuse passwords (20 percent), while Millennials are more than twice as likely to reuse passwords (47 percent) across their accounts

• A significant part of online shopping revolves around trusting an online retailer is who they say they are, and effectively safeguarding your personal and financial information. Despite a mistrust of online retailers, consumers are still storing their personal and financial information on these websites

• About one third of respondents (32 percent) are not confident that they could spot a fraudulent or fake online retailer

• About one in three do not “completely” or “mostly” trust the websites they use to effectively protect their personal/credit card information**

• 33 percent of respondents save their credit card information in their online accounts

• The study shows the Boomers have a greater mistrust of websites than Millennials, potentially leading them to have better online privacy practices

• 37 percent of Millennials save their credit card information in their online accounts, while only 19 percent of Boomers do

• On average, Boomers (42 percent) are almost twice as likely to feel unconfident in their ability to spot a fraudulent online retailer than Gen Z (23 percent) and Millennials (29 percent)

• Despite being concerned about cybersecurity, approximately one out of two (49 percent) respondents stated that they do not use MFA, don’t know what it is or are not sure if they have MFA turned on

• As with most other categories, Boomers reported having better cybersecurity hygiene than Millennials, with only 47 percent of them reporting that they do not use MFA, don’t know what it is or are not sure if they have MFA turned on, compared to 52 percent of Millennials

“96 percent of respondents in our study plan to shop online between October and December, which makes now an ideal time to review online security habits,” Eichorst continued. “While there is much that can be done to improve security, the first step for consumers is to review existing sign-in methods, creating unique credentials stored in a trusted password manager, and, if possible, upgrading login methods to use strong, phishing-resistant, multi-factor authentication solutions, such as the YubiKey." 

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