Beliefs, Attitudes and Uses Underpinning Freedom of Expression and Privacy Online: A Comparative...

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Beliefs, Attitudes and Uses Underpinning Freedom of Expression and Privacy Online: A Comparative Perspective William Dutton Oxford Internet Institute, University of Oxford Global Values Project: http://www.oii.ox.ac.uk/research/projects/?id=65 Presentation for Freedom of Expression on the Internet, UNESCO, with the Moroccan Internet Society, Marrakesh, Morocco, 16 February 2013

Transcript of Beliefs, Attitudes and Uses Underpinning Freedom of Expression and Privacy Online: A Comparative...

Page 1: Beliefs, Attitudes and Uses Underpinning Freedom of Expression and Privacy Online: A Comparative Perspective William Dutton Oxford Internet Institute,

Beliefs, Attitudes and Uses Underpinning Freedom of Expression and Privacy Online:

A Comparative Perspective

William DuttonOxford Internet Institute, University of Oxford

Global Values Project: http://www.oii.ox.ac.uk/research/projects/?id=65

Presentation for Freedom of Expression on the Internet, UNESCO, with the Moroccan Internet Society, Marrakesh, Morocco, 16 February 2013

Page 2: Beliefs, Attitudes and Uses Underpinning Freedom of Expression and Privacy Online: A Comparative Perspective William Dutton Oxford Internet Institute,

Focus: Global User Perspectives on Freedom of Expression

Researchers: William Dutton, Principal Investigator; Soumitra Dutta, Co-Principal Investigator; Ginette Law, Research Associate,

Gillian Bolsover, Research Assistant, Isabella Litke, Research Assistant

Based at the Oxford Internet Institute, University of Oxford, in collaboration with the Samuel Curtis Johnson Graduate School of

Management, Cornell University.

Surveys conducted in collaboration with the World Economic Forum (WEF) and comScore with support from ictQatar

Administrative support through ISIS Innovation, University of Oxford

Online field research conducted by Toluna and comScore

The Global Values Project

Page 3: Beliefs, Attitudes and Uses Underpinning Freedom of Expression and Privacy Online: A Comparative Perspective William Dutton Oxford Internet Institute,

1. New online nations are dominant in the New World;

2. Users developing a global Internet culture: sharing similar values and attitudes;

3. Newly adopting countries are as liberal, if not more so, such as in support for freedom of expression;

4. Users in the newly adopting nations are more innovative in some patterns of use, e.g., social networking.

The Global Values Project: The New Internet World

Page 4: Beliefs, Attitudes and Uses Underpinning Freedom of Expression and Privacy Online: A Comparative Perspective William Dutton Oxford Internet Institute,

Research Questions

• Where does MENA sit in the ‘New Internet World’?

• Are there patterns of beliefs, attitudes or use constraining freedom of expression or privacy online in the MENA region?

Page 5: Beliefs, Attitudes and Uses Underpinning Freedom of Expression and Privacy Online: A Comparative Perspective William Dutton Oxford Internet Institute,

Methodology

• Online survey of Internet users in selected nations of the Middle East and North Africa conducted in two phases, from July through September 2012, fielded by Toluna.*

• Merged with online survey of Internet users in selected nations world-wide from July through September 2012, fielded by comScore.

• Contextualized by review of related research and literature, including other survey data available to the project investigators.

*The survey was suspended during Ramadan.

Page 6: Beliefs, Attitudes and Uses Underpinning Freedom of Expression and Privacy Online: A Comparative Perspective William Dutton Oxford Internet Institute,

(N) = 2,309 (N) = 9,166

The Survey Sample

Composition:

• 11,225 respondents in over 58 countriesMENA

REGIONAFRICA LATIN

AMERICAASIA EUROPE OCEANIA /

AUSNORTH

AMERICATOTAL

(N) 2,803 595 1,825 2,156 2,025 509 1,312 11,225

Page 7: Beliefs, Attitudes and Uses Underpinning Freedom of Expression and Privacy Online: A Comparative Perspective William Dutton Oxford Internet Institute,

MENA REGION GCC NORTH AFRICA

Algeria 229 Bahrain 11 Algeria 229

Bahrain 11 Kuwait 197 Egypt 529

Egypt 529 Oman 141 Morocco 270

Iran 3 Qatar 156 Tunisia 108

Iraq 1 Saudi Arabia 511

Israel 10 UAE 245

Jordan 243

Kuwait 197

Morocco 270

Oman 141

Qatar 156Saudi Arabia 511

Tunisia 108

UAE 245

Yemen 149

TOTAL 2803 1261 1136

Page 8: Beliefs, Attitudes and Uses Underpinning Freedom of Expression and Privacy Online: A Comparative Perspective William Dutton Oxford Internet Institute,

Languages Used by Respondents

46%

21%

11%

5%

3%

3%

3%

3%3% 3%

English Arabic LatAm Span. Chinese French German Japanese Spanish Italian Korean

Page 9: Beliefs, Attitudes and Uses Underpinning Freedom of Expression and Privacy Online: A Comparative Perspective William Dutton Oxford Internet Institute,

Global Values: Freedom of Expression, Privacy, Trust, …

Image scourtesy of maya picture and digitalart/FreeDigitalPhotos.net

Page 10: Beliefs, Attitudes and Uses Underpinning Freedom of Expression and Privacy Online: A Comparative Perspective William Dutton Oxford Internet Institute,

Perceptions of Media Freedom in the MENA Region

Radio Print TV Internet

MENA (n=2803) 0.45 0.49 0.47 0.7

Global Average (n=11225) 0.66 0.65 0.65 0.82

5%

15%

25%

35%

45%

55%

65%

75%

85%

% o

f res

pond

ents

who

bel

ieve

that

the

med

ia h

as fr

eedo

m

Page 11: Beliefs, Attitudes and Uses Underpinning Freedom of Expression and Privacy Online: A Comparative Perspective William Dutton Oxford Internet Institute,

Radio Print TV Internet

North Africa (n=1136) 0.47 0.54 0.47 0.78

GCC (n=1261) 0.44 0.46 0.47 0.63

5%

15%

25%

35%

45%

55%

65%

75%

85%

Perceptions of Media Freedom in North Africa and the GCC Region

% o

f res

pond

ents

who

bel

ieve

that

the

med

i a h

as fr

eedo

m

Page 12: Beliefs, Attitudes and Uses Underpinning Freedom of Expression and Privacy Online: A Comparative Perspective William Dutton Oxford Internet Institute,

Oman Saudi Arabia UAE Yemen Qatar Jordan Morocco Algeria Kuwait Tunisia Egypt0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

70%

80%

90%

52%

59%

66% 67%70% 71% 71%

74% 74%

80%82%

Perceptions of Internet Freedom%

of r

espo

nden

ts w

ho b

elie

ve th

at th

e In

tern

et is

free

Page 13: Beliefs, Attitudes and Uses Underpinning Freedom of Expression and Privacy Online: A Comparative Perspective William Dutton Oxford Internet Institute,

1 Totally disagree

2 3 4 5 6 Totally agree 70%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

70%

5% 5%

9% 10% 10%

59%

3% 2%

12%

18%

46%

3%

10%12% 12%

54%

4% 5%

11%14% 13%

47%

"Access to the Internet should be a fundamental right for all people."

MENA (n=2694)North Africa (n=1092)GCC ( (n=1203)World Average (n=10794)

Page 14: Beliefs, Attitudes and Uses Underpinning Freedom of Expression and Privacy Online: A Comparative Perspective William Dutton Oxford Internet Institute,

Saudi Arabia UAE Egypt Oman Morocco Algeria Qatar Tunisia Yemen Jordan Kuwait0

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

5.135.37

5.63 5.65

5.95 5.96 6.036.16 6.18 6.18 6.18

"Access to the Internet should be a fundamental right for all people." (mean)

Page 15: Beliefs, Attitudes and Uses Underpinning Freedom of Expression and Privacy Online: A Comparative Perspective William Dutton Oxford Internet Institute,

1 Totally disagree

2 3 4 5 6 Totally agree 70%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

7% 6%

12%

15% 14%

42%

6% 5%

11%

14%

11%

48%

9%7%

15% 16% 16%

33%

4% 3% 5%

13%

19%

41%

"People should be able to say what they feel about their government on the Internet."

MENA (n=2639)North Africa (n=1078)GCC ( (n=1163)World Average (n=10754)

Page 16: Beliefs, Attitudes and Uses Underpinning Freedom of Expression and Privacy Online: A Comparative Perspective William Dutton Oxford Internet Institute,

1 Totally disagree

2 3 4 5 6 Totally agree 70%

5%

10%

15%

20%

25%

30%

35%

40%

45%

6%5%

8%

16%

18%17%

31%

7%6%

8%

19% 19%18%

23%

4% 4%

7%

16%

21%22%

27%

4%

7%

13%

16% 16%

39%

"I can express myself freely online."

MENA (n=2700)North Africa (n=1097)GCC ( (n=1204)World Average (n=10831)

Page 17: Beliefs, Attitudes and Uses Underpinning Freedom of Expression and Privacy Online: A Comparative Perspective William Dutton Oxford Internet Institute,

“I can express myself freely online” Proportions Who ‘Totally Disagree’ (MENA)

Male; 6%Female; 8%

Gender

Under 18 18-24 25-34 35-44 45-54 55-64 65+

8%7%

6%5%

8%7%

0%

Age**

<6 months 6 mo-<1yr 1 yr-<2 yrs 2 yrs-<5 yrs 5-7 yrs >7 yrs

15%

9%

7%

9%

7%

5%

Experience**

1 Poor 2 3 4 5 6 7 Excellent

29%

17%

7%10%

7%4%

6%

Skills**

0-5 hrs/week 6-10 hrs/week

11-15 hrs/week

16-20 hrs/week

>20 hrs/week

11%

8%

6% 5% 5%

Time of use**

Did not atten

d high sc

hool

High sc

hool

High sc

hool grad

uate

Post-sec

ondy sch

ool

Post-sec

ondy deg

ree

Graduate

school

Graduate

school d

egree

14%

8% 9%

5% 5%7% 6%

Education**

Page 18: Beliefs, Attitudes and Uses Underpinning Freedom of Expression and Privacy Online: A Comparative Perspective William Dutton Oxford Internet Institute,

1 Totally disagree 2 3 4 5 6 Totally agree 70%

5%

10%

15%

20%

25%

30%

35%

40%

45%

11%

5%

7%

13% 13%

37%

10%

5%6%

11%

14%

11%

42%

11%

6%

8%

14%15%

32%

10%

6%

8%

16%17% 17%

27%

"I feel free to say things online that others might not agree with."

MENA (n=2682)

North Africa (n=1093)

GCC ( (n=1194)

World Average (n=10735)

Page 19: Beliefs, Attitudes and Uses Underpinning Freedom of Expression and Privacy Online: A Comparative Perspective William Dutton Oxford Internet Institute,

1 Totally disagree

2 3 4 5 6 Totally agree 7 Don't know0%

5%

10%

15%

20%

25%

10%

7%8%

18%

12%

22%

5%

11%

8%

11%

18%17%

6%

8%7%

10%

20%21%

15% 15%

4%

9%

19%20%

“The Internet is a safe place to express my opinions."

MENA (n=2803)North Africa (n=1136)GCC ( (n=1261)World Average (n=11225)

Page 20: Beliefs, Attitudes and Uses Underpinning Freedom of Expression and Privacy Online: A Comparative Perspective William Dutton Oxford Internet Institute,

Oman Tunisia Saudi Arabia Jordan Morocco UAE Qatar Kuwait Algeria Egypt Yemen1

2

3

4

5

6

7

4.134.27 4.3 4.35 4.39 4.46 4.52 4.53

4.66 4.73

5.06

"The Internet is a safe place to express my opinions." (mean)

Page 21: Beliefs, Attitudes and Uses Underpinning Freedom of Expression and Privacy Online: A Comparative Perspective William Dutton Oxford Internet Institute,

Algeria Yemen Saudi Arabia Jordan Egypt Qatar Tunisia Kuwait Morocco Oman UAE1

2

3

4

5

6

7

3.523.67

3.87 3.92 3.994.12 4.13

4.26 4.28

4.56 4.56

”How concerned are you personally about your opin-ion being censored online." (mean)

Page 22: Beliefs, Attitudes and Uses Underpinning Freedom of Expression and Privacy Online: A Comparative Perspective William Dutton Oxford Internet Institute,

1 Totally disagree

2 3 4 5 6 Totally agree 70%

5%

10%

15%

20%

25%

30%

35%

13%

6%

8%

13%

16%

13%

30%

15%

7%

9%

12%

14%

12%

31%

12%

7%8%

15%

13%

28%

10%

6%7%

16%

18%17%

27%

"There are times when people should be able to be anonymous on the Internet."

MENA (n=2665)North Africa (n=1064)GCC (n=1185)World Average (n=10701)

Page 23: Beliefs, Attitudes and Uses Underpinning Freedom of Expression and Privacy Online: A Comparative Perspective William Dutton Oxford Internet Institute,

1 Totally disagree

2 3 4 5 6 Totally agree 7 Don't Know0%

5%

10%

15%

20%

25%

30%

16%

12%

10%

28%

7%

18%

6%7%

13%

11%

9%

21%

14%

8%

15%14%

11%

24%

9%

11%

5%

7%

16%15%

14%

27%

6%

"Government authorities should not censor political content on the Internet."

MENA (n=2803)North Africa (n=1136)GCC ( (n=1261)World Average (n=11225)

Page 24: Beliefs, Attitudes and Uses Underpinning Freedom of Expression and Privacy Online: A Comparative Perspective William Dutton Oxford Internet Institute,

1 Totally disagree

2 3 4 5 6 Totally agree 70%

5%

10%

15%

20%

25%

30%

18%

9%

16%15%

24%

17%

8%

10%

13%14%

11%

27%

20%

9%8%

18%

16%

12%

18%

10%

7%

9%

17%18% 18%

23%

“It is OK for people to express their ideas on the Internet, even if they are extreme.”

MENA (n=2652)North Africa (n=1079)GCC ( (n=1180)World Average (n=10761)

Page 25: Beliefs, Attitudes and Uses Underpinning Freedom of Expression and Privacy Online: A Comparative Perspective William Dutton Oxford Internet Institute,

Oman Saudi Arabia Kuwait UAE Egypt Morocco Tunisia Qatar Yemen Jordan Algeria1

2

3

4

5

6

7

3.94.03 4.04

4.164.28 4.31 4.36 4.41 4.42

4.66 4.69

"It is OK for people to express their ideas on the Internet, even if they are extreme." (mean)

Page 26: Beliefs, Attitudes and Uses Underpinning Freedom of Expression and Privacy Online: A Comparative Perspective William Dutton Oxford Internet Institute,

Privacy and Data Protection

Imagess courtesy of Salvatore Vuono and adamr/FreeDigitalPhotos.net

• Users are divided over the conditions under which governments should have any role in monitoring online behavior. • Users express guarded support for monitoring use, but not tracking their own online activity.• Users exhibit uncertainty over who is collecting what personal information about them online.• Many users are worried about putting personal information online.

Page 27: Beliefs, Attitudes and Uses Underpinning Freedom of Expression and Privacy Online: A Comparative Perspective William Dutton Oxford Internet Institute,

1 Totally disagree

2 3 4 5 6 Totally agree 70%

5%

10%

15%

20%

25%

30%

18%17%

14%

11%

20%

8% 8%

12%

9%

26%

15%

7%

15%

12%

8%9%

19%

17%

13%

19%

"Government authorities should monitor content posted on the Internet."

MENA (n=2649)North Africa (n=1084)GCC ( (n=1176)World Average (n=10763)

Page 28: Beliefs, Attitudes and Uses Underpinning Freedom of Expression and Privacy Online: A Comparative Perspective William Dutton Oxford Internet Institute,

1 Totally disagree

2 3 4 5 6 Totally agree 7 Don't Know0%

5%

10%

15%

20%

25%

30%

35%

40%

45%

38%

7%

11%

6%

39%

10%

6%

12%

10%

5%

12%

6%

34%

13%

11%

35%

11%

8%

14%

11%

7%

9%

4%

"Government authorities should track my online ac-tivity."

MENA (n=2803)North Africa (n=1136)GCC ( (n=1261)World Average (n=11225)Series6

Page 29: Beliefs, Attitudes and Uses Underpinning Freedom of Expression and Privacy Online: A Comparative Perspective William Dutton Oxford Internet Institute,

1 Totally disagree

2 3 4 5 6 Totally agree 7 Don't Know0%

5%

10%

15%

20%

25%

30%

16%

6% 6%

10%

12%

10%

25%

15%

22%

7%

5%

10%9%

22%

12%

6% 6%

11%

14%

11%

26%

14%14%

7%8%

14%13%

19%

12%

"The government monitors what people do on the Internet."

MENA (n=2803)

North Africa (n=1136)

GCC ( (n=1261)

World Average (n=11225)

Page 30: Beliefs, Attitudes and Uses Underpinning Freedom of Expression and Privacy Online: A Comparative Perspective William Dutton Oxford Internet Institute,

Egypt Algeria Saudi Arabia Tunisia Morocco Yemen Qatar UAE Oman Kuwait Jordan1

2

3

4

5

6

7

3.91

4.28 4.32 4.37 4.44.53

4.78 4.835 5.1 5.11

"The government monitors what people do on the Internet." (mean)

Page 31: Beliefs, Attitudes and Uses Underpinning Freedom of Expression and Privacy Online: A Comparative Perspective William Dutton Oxford Internet Institute,

1 Totally disagree

2 3 4 5 6 Totally agree 70%

5%

10%

15%

20%

25%

30%

35%

32%

6%

13%

7%

23%

33%

8%

12%11%

6%

24%

29%

9%

7%

13%12%

8%

22%

10%

8%

15%

10%

17%

"Government authorities should know with whom I communicate online."

MENA (n=2659)North Africa (n=1079)GCC ( (n=1185)World Average (n=10815)

Page 32: Beliefs, Attitudes and Uses Underpinning Freedom of Expression and Privacy Online: A Comparative Perspective William Dutton Oxford Internet Institute,

The MENA Region Reflects the New Internet World

- Innovative Uses of the Internet and Social Media

- Support for the Internet for Information, Entertainment, Expression, …

- Support for Core Internet Values: Freedom of Expression, Privacy, …

- But More Sensitive Areas of Expression

Concerns over Privacy, Trust, Security, …

Spectrum of Regional Opinions between Two Poles:

Traditional versus Next Generation Users

(education, age, and experience online)

Differences with MENA Region

Over-Arching Themes

Image courtesy of uak_rock8/Flickr.com

Page 33: Beliefs, Attitudes and Uses Underpinning Freedom of Expression and Privacy Online: A Comparative Perspective William Dutton Oxford Internet Institute,

Interventions in Support of More Inclusive Access:

- Take-up

- Skills

- Digital Literacy

Encourage Greater Use in Business, Government and Commerce

Foster Dialogue Across the Spectrum of Opinions

Address Uncertainties and Anxieties

Implications for Discussion