One third of the polled VTsIOM encountered Internet fraud, every third out of them more than once. Twelve people out of a hundred sometimes store CVCs and PINs of bank cards in a computer.
Sixty percent of respondents encountered malicious viruses and programs. Every second Russian user of the network is not afraid of attacks by Internet fraudsters, less than half of the respondents feel vulnerable to them.
Almost ninety percent of respondents believe that fraudsters in the network need bank details, passwords and PIN-codes of bank cards, sixty percent believe that passport information is important. According to respondents, the lowest demand is for social network passwords, personal photos, audio and video documents, and passwords from computers,
smartphones, and tablets — these threats were noted by ten to fifteen percent of those polled.
Less than half of users do not connect to public Wi-Fi in cafes, train stations and other public places.
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According
to Trustwave , the most common password is Password1, and
Slashdata’s password rating includes 123456, password and 12345. Seventy percent of Russian Internet users polled by VTsIOM say they do not use simple passwords like 12345 or ABCG. The
study does not specify how complex passwords respondents use.