<p>Almost 30 percent of smartphone users leave their device unlocked as they do not believe they have any data worth protecting, a survey conducted by the University of California Berkeley and Google revealed.<br /><br /></p>.<p>About a third of people with smartphones find locking their phones too much of a hassle and one-fourth of users believe no one would care about what is on their phone.<br /><br />The researchers asked smartphone owners detailed questions and also accessed data from a Google survey of more than 2,500 smartphone users, who answered questions related to security locks on their phones.<br /><br />They found that many failed to see the difference between security and privacy.Most of them locked their phones so that friends and family did not snoop on their devices.<br /><br />Users also did not realise that they had sensitive information stored on the phone and the consequences if it were stolen, media reports said.<br /><br />Of those who chose not to lock their phones, many simply lacked the desire to do so in the first place.<br /><br />The most common explanation was lack of motivation as they simply had not gotten around to setting it up, but were not averse to it, the survey noted.<br /><br />Access to emails without passwords on smartphones was considered to be another lapse.<br /><br />Within their emails, three-quarters had their home addresses and half of them their birth dates.<br /><br />Also, 26 percent had their bank account numbers and 16 percent had stored their credit card numbers in their emails, the findings showed.</p>
<p>Almost 30 percent of smartphone users leave their device unlocked as they do not believe they have any data worth protecting, a survey conducted by the University of California Berkeley and Google revealed.<br /><br /></p>.<p>About a third of people with smartphones find locking their phones too much of a hassle and one-fourth of users believe no one would care about what is on their phone.<br /><br />The researchers asked smartphone owners detailed questions and also accessed data from a Google survey of more than 2,500 smartphone users, who answered questions related to security locks on their phones.<br /><br />They found that many failed to see the difference between security and privacy.Most of them locked their phones so that friends and family did not snoop on their devices.<br /><br />Users also did not realise that they had sensitive information stored on the phone and the consequences if it were stolen, media reports said.<br /><br />Of those who chose not to lock their phones, many simply lacked the desire to do so in the first place.<br /><br />The most common explanation was lack of motivation as they simply had not gotten around to setting it up, but were not averse to it, the survey noted.<br /><br />Access to emails without passwords on smartphones was considered to be another lapse.<br /><br />Within their emails, three-quarters had their home addresses and half of them their birth dates.<br /><br />Also, 26 percent had their bank account numbers and 16 percent had stored their credit card numbers in their emails, the findings showed.</p>