New Zealand Security - April-May 2021

Page 45

CYBER SECURITY

Netsafe sheds light on COVID online harm If the health and economic consequences of COVID weren’t bad enough, NZ’s online safety organisation reports a massive spike in unwanted digital communications and harm during and after lockdown. According to a report by Netsafe released in December, COVID-19 also presented a challenging period in terms of online harm, with lockdowns creating “a perfect storm for people experiencing online harm like never before.” Between 2 June and 7 July 2020, Netsafe, which was set up in 1998 as an independent, non-profit online safety organisation, carried out a nationally representative survey that asked New Zealand adults about their personal experiences of receiving unwanted digital communications in the previous 12 months and, if they had, when this had occurred in relation to the nationwide lockdown. Unwanted digital communications, according to Netsafe, include “a range of online experience(s) mediated/facilitated by unsolicited electronic communication(s) that might or might not cause distress and/or harm to the person who deals with it (e.g. receiving spam, accidentally seeing inappropriate content, having rumours spread about oneself, being threatened online). “As New Zealand’s lockdown got underway, the number of reports about harmful digital communications that Netsafe’s call centre received began to increase, with this trend continuing beyond the lockdown period,” Netsafe noted in a report factsheet. “Similar patterns were observed in the UK and Australia by organisations providing comparable support services.” According to Netsafe’s research, the number of individuals suffering unwanted digital communications – encouraging people to hurt or kill themselves – increased. This is supported by data that illustrates how lockdowns impacted online harm and drove demand for self-help resources. When the Lockdown period was compared to the same time in 2019, it was found scam reports were up 74 percent, sextortion 35 percent, romance scams 69 percent, intimidation 45 percent and the supply and distribution of objectionable material 66 percent. Of participants who reported being a victim to at least one unwanted digital communication during the last year, 41 percent said it occurred during and/or after Lockdown.

April/May 2021

Males (46 percent), those aged between 40 and 49 (59 percent) and New Zealand Europeans (44 percent), were most likely to have suffered online harm. Around six in ten people with long-term disabilities who received unwanted digital communications, did so during and/or after the Lockdown period. Some types of unwanted digital communications were more likely than others to be sent during and/or after lockdown. These involved trying to get the person receiving it to hurt themselves or share their intimate images or recordings without their permission. Categories that attracted the largest numbers of online harm during and/or after Lockdown included encouraging people to hurt or kill themselves (65 percent), sharing intimate images or recordings without permission (65 percent), sharing violent or sexual content considered indecent or obscene (55 percent), and offensive comments about religious or political beliefs (54 percent). Also above the 50 percent mark were physical threats and intimidation (53 percent), unwanted sexual advances (53 percent), and Stalking by monitoring a person’s online activity to intimidate or control them (52 percent).

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Articles inside

Big increase in cyberattacks reported by NZ businesses

6min
pages 46-48

Netsafe sheds light on COVID online harm

2min
page 45

Resolving the security skills shortage

7min
pages 42-44

NZSA CEO’s March Report

9min
pages 38-41

Melonie Cole: Placing people at the centre of security

5min
pages 32-33

ASIS NZ Chapter’s Women in Security 2021

4min
pages 34-35

History of Women in Tech and Cyber Security

3min
pages 30-31

PSPLA clarifies Private investigator confusion

5min
pages 36-37

Managing Cybersecurity threats with Security By Design

5min
pages 28-29

Security’s Role in Business Continuity

2min
page 25

Gallagher security for SMB – App based business security at your fingertips

2min
pages 12-13

Aotea Security’s inaugural Auckland Security Risk Management Seminar

4min
pages 14-15

How correct product selection can turn a good video solution into a perfect one

5min
pages 20-21

The Professional: Ngaire Kelaher

6min
pages 10-11

From the editor

3min
pages 6-7

New Zealand Reassesses Counterterrorism Post-Christchurch

8min
pages 22-24

AX PRO comprehensive wireless alarm solution launched by Hikvision

2min
pages 16-17

Access Control: when optimal security is key

4min
pages 8-9
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