Tech News

Tech Business News

  • Home
  • Technology
  • Business
  • News
    • Technology News
    • Local Tech News
    • World Tech News
    • General News
    • News Stories
  • Media Releases
    • Tech Media Releases
    • General Media Releases
  • Advertisers
    • Advertiser Content
    • Promoted Content
    • Sponsored Whitepapers
    • Advertising Options
  • Cyber
  • Reports
  • People
  • Science
  • Articles
    • Opinion
    • Digital Marketing
    • Gaming
    • Guest Publishers
  • About
    • Tech Business News
    • News Contributions -Submit
    • Journalist Application
    • Contact Us
Reading: Consumers Demand Better Protection Amid Concerns Over Excessive Data Collection For AI Use
Share
Font ResizerAa
Tech Business NewsTech Business News
  • Home
  • Technology News
  • Business News
  • News Stories
  • General News
  • World News
  • Media Releases
Search
  • News
    • Technology News
    • Business News
    • Local News
    • News Stories
    • General News
    • World News
    • Global News
  • Media Releases
    • Tech Media Releases
    • General Press
  • Categories
    • Crypto News
    • Cyber
    • Digital Marketing
    • Education
    • Gadgets
    • Technology
    • Guest Publishers
    • IT Security
    • People In Technology
    • Reports
    • Science
    • Software
    • Stock Market
  • Promoted Content
    • Advertisers
    • Promoted
    • Sponsored Whitepapers
  • Contact & About
    • Contact Information
    • About Tech Business News
    • News Contributions & Submissions
Follow US
© 2022 Tech Business News- Australian Technology News. All Rights Reserved.
Tech Business News > Reports > Consumers Demand Better Protection Amid Concerns Over Excessive Data Collection For AI Use
Reports

Consumers Demand Better Protection Amid Concerns Over Excessive Data Collection For AI Use

A new survey from Cohesity highlights global consumer concerns over data collection, especially for AI use. Notably, 73% of respondents in the UK, 81% in the US, and 82% in Australia criticised companies for collecting excessive personal or financial data.

Editorial Desk
Last updated: October 11, 2024 6:31 pm
Editorial Desk
Share
SHARE

Cohesity recently revealed new survey data. It found consumers worldwide are highly concerned about the information companies collect from them – especially when it’s used for artificial intelligence (AI).

Contents
Most common consumer fears surrounding unregulated AI data collectionAbout the research

The overwhelming majority of respondents (73% in the UK, 81% in the US and 82% in Australia) criticised companies for collecting too much of their personal or financial data.

And 9 out of 10 consumers are concerned that AI will impact how companies keep customer data secure. Meeting customers’ growing expectations for better protection of their sensitive information is now a business imperative, with consumers prepared to punish companies by switching providers for any loss of trust.

The survey of 6,000+ consumers worldwide polled assessments of the digital industry’s data practices.

Alongside the criticism around companies’ hunger for data, the findings also spell out an unmet expectation for greater diligence from organisations to protect consumers’ personal information once obtained – as identified by 73% of respondents in the UK, 86% in the US, and 87% in AU.

Respondents aren’t just asking for a change – they are willing to change their preferred seller if they fall victim to a cyberattack and their data is compromised.

A near consensus among users in all three countries (more than 90%) said they might stop doing business with a company if it were the victim of a cyberattack.

According to Cohesity Global Cyber Security Strategist James Blake consumers clearly understand that companies have a lot of catching up to do in the area of data governance and security.

“The hunger for AI is causing some businesses to skip threat modeling and due diligence on how their data will be exposed,” Blake said.

“Companies looking to use AI in-house must invest in the security and hygiene of their data to maintain cyber resilience in order to satisfy these consumers that are willing to vote with their purchases,”

Those looking to leverage the AI capabilities of suppliers must adopt a strong and proactive approach to third-party risk,”

“Consumer trust is quickly lost, and competitors are always just a click away, so ensuring AI strategies don’t introduce additional risk to customer data is crucial.” he said.

Most common consumer fears surrounding unregulated AI data collection

Companies around the world expect miracles from AI, but large amounts of data must be collected for these AI models to learn from.

Often, this need for data is prioritised over responsible data collection and handling. Private users are, in turn, concerned with the lack of transparency from companies regarding their AI practices:

● Nearly all consumers (87% in the UK, 92% in the US, and 93% in Australia) are concerned that AI will make securing and managing their data much more challenging.

● Most even go a step further to classify AI as a risk to data protection and security (64% in the UK, 72% in the US, and 83% in Australia).

● Worsening these fears about AI’s implications for their data, consumers (70% in the UK, 81% in the US, and 83% in Australia) are severely concerned with the unrestricted or unpoliced use of AI with their data, with the vast majority demanding greater transparency and regulation.

● At a minimum, private users (74% in the UK, 85% in the US, and 88% in Australia) want to be asked for permission before their personal or financial data is fed into AI models. The expectation of greater transparency also applies to the common practice of sharing data with third-party providers

● The vast majority of respondents (79% in the UK, 87% in the US, and 90% in Australia) want to know who their data is being shared with.

● Most respondents (77% in the UK, 85% in the US, and 90% in Australia) also call for companies to vet third-party providers’ data security and management practices with access to customer data.

● Over half of those surveyed (46% in the UK, 75% in the US, and 62% in Australia) had been personally impacted by a cyberattack.

● More than half of those surveyed do not agree with the idea that companies should pay ransoms (56% in the UK, 52% in the US, and 58% in Australia), condemning the common practice of companies buying their way out of ransomware attacks.

“Paying a ransom rarely results in the recovery of all data. It brings its own logistical challenges and potential criminal liability for paying sanctioned entities – not to mention rewarding criminals,”

“It’s time for companies to really focus on aligning themselves with the best cyber resiliency vendors and end the cycle.” Blake concluded.

About the research

The research included in this release was conducted by Censuswide, with 6002 Respondents in the UK, US, and Australia (Nat Rep) between 28.06.2024 – 05.07.2024.

ByEditorial Desk
The TBN team is a well establish group of technology industry professionals with backgrounds in IT Systems, Business Communications and Journalism.
Previous Article Intel has officially launched its highly anticipated Arrow Lake Core Ultra 200 desktop processors Bad News For AMD: Intel Reveals Core Ultra 200 Desktop Processors
Next Article WordPress Plugins Can Lead To A Cyber breach Disaster WordPress Plugins Can Lead To A Cyber Disaster: A Cautionary Tale
Leave a Comment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.

Cohesity Study Finds Consumers Worldwide Criticize Companies’ Data Consumption - James Blake

Tech Articles

How Telstra Held Back Australia’s Internet Speed — And What It Means for Users

How Telstra Held Back Australia’s Internet Speed — And What It Means for Users

How Telstra Held Back Australia’s Internet Speed — And What…

January 21, 2026
Australia's Heavy Vehicle EV Charging Market

Australia’s Heavy Vehicle EV Charging Market: A Critical Infrastructure Gap Being Filled

Australia’s heavy EV market is accelerating, but charging is the…

February 15, 2026
Gmail AI is reading your emails — here is how to stop it

Your Gmail Account May Be Feeding Google’s AI—Here’s What You Need to Know

Your Gmail account may be contributing to Google’s AI systems…

January 26, 2026

Recent News

GigaOm names Cloudflare a Leader in DDoS Protection
Reports

GigaOm Named Cloudflare Leader In 2022 Radar Report For DDoS Protection

2 Min Read
SOTI - Michael Dyson, VP for Sales
Reports

SOTI Research Finds 93% of Aussies Embrace In-Store Tech, Yet 80% Worry About Data Security

7 Min Read
Reports

2025 Web Hosting Industry Outlook

7 Min Read
63% of privacy professionals find role more stressful than 5 years ago: New ISACA report
Reports

ISACA Report: 63% of Privacy Professionals Say Their Jobs Are More Stressful Than 5 Years Ago

7 Min Read
Tech News

Tech Business News

In 2026, technology news is shaping business outcomes faster than ever—driven by AI adoption, rising cyber risk, cloud modernisation, data regulation, and constant platform change.


Tech News keeps Australian organisations and industry professionals informed with timely reporting and practical coverage across AI, cybersecurity, cloud, enterprise IT, startups, science, people and business, plus major world and local news impacting the tech sector.


Tech Business News publishes news and analysis designed to be clear, relevant, and easy to act on. It supports the industry with technology news reports, whitepaper publishing services, and a range of media, advertising and publishing options 

About

About Us 
Contact Us 
Privacy Policy
Copyright Policy
Terms & Conditions

April, 15, 2026

Contact

Tech Business News
Melbourne, Australia
Werribee 3030
Phone: +61 431401041

Hours : Monday to Friday, 9am 530-pm.

Tech News

© Copyright Tech Business News 

Latest Australian Tech News – 2026

Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Username or Email Address
Password

Lost your password?