People, Power & Technology: The 2020 Digital Attitudes Report
Doteveryone, the responsible technology think tank, in association with BritainThinks launched its People, Power & Technology: The 2020 Digital Attitudes Report on 12th May 2020. This year’s research finds people continue to feel the internet is better for them as individuals than for society as a whole. 81% say the internet has made life a lot or a little better for ‘people like me’ while 58% say it has had a very positive or fairly positive impact on society overall.
In discussions held shortly after the start of the pandemic lockdown, people were particularly grateful for their ability to continue to work, maintain friendships and access information thanks to technology.
However, there’s been a significant drop in the strength of people’s enthusiasm over the past two years with 38% saying the internet has made life a lot better for people like them, compared to 50% in 2018.
And it finds most people (58%) think the industry is under-regulated. They identify government (53%) and independent regulators (48%) as having most responsibility for directing the impacts of technology on people and society.
It finds that although people’s digital understanding has grown, that’s not helping them to shape their online experiences in line with their own wishes. They still struggle to get information about the issues that matter and to choose services that match their preferences.
And it finds people often don’t know where to turn when things go wrong. Even if they do report problems, they often don’t get any answers. Over a quarter (26%) say they’ve reported experiencing a problem online but that nothing happened as a result.
They mistrust tech companies’ motives – only 19% believe they design their services with people’s best interests in mind – feel powerless to influence what they do, and are resigned to services where harmful experiences are perceived to be part of the everyday.
The current societal shift is an opportunity to shape a fairer future where technology works for more people, more of the time. Our practical recommendations to government and industry provide clear steps to make that happen.
Key findings
People are taking a range of measures online that stem from their digital understanding. Most people have checked their privacy settings (73%), looked for news outside their filter bubble (67%) or used an ad blocker (56%) but people tend to take these actions only occasionally.
Nearly half (47%) feel they have no choice but to sign up to services despite concerns and 45% feel there’s no point reading terms and conditions because companies will do what they want anyway.
Over a quarter of the public (26%) say they’ve reported experiencing a problem online but that nothing happened as a result. More than half would like more places to seek help (55%) and a more straightforward procedure for reporting tech companies (53%).
Only 19% believe tech companies are designing their products and services with their best interests in mind. Half (50%) believe it’s ‘part and parcel’ of being online that people will try to cheat or harm them in some way.
Recommendations
We recommend the creation of an independent body, the Office for Responsible Technology, to lead a concerted, coordinated and urgent effort to create a regulatory landscape fit for the digital age and ensure the benefits of technology are evenly shared in a post-pandemic world.
We recommend all tech companies implement trustworthy, transparent design patterns that show how services work and give people meaningful control over how they operate. The Competition and Markets Authority, in coordination with the Information Commissioner’s Office, should set and enforce best practice for understandability, transparency and meaningful choice for the platforms where people spend most of their time online.
We recommend the Government should base its forthcoming media literacy strategy around new models of public empowerment for the digital age that:
- Meet people where they are, with opportunities to act embedded into products and services
- Provide information that’s specific to the issue and tailored to the individual’s capability and mindset
- Enhance rather than detract from current online experiences and create feedback about the impact of any action, creating the motivation to act
We recommend all tech companies create accessible and straightforward ways for people to report concerns and provide clear information about the actions they take as a result. And we recommend the incoming online harms regulator provide robust oversight of companies’ complaints processes founded on seven principles of better redress in the digital age:
- Design that’s as good as the rest of the service
- Signposting at the point-of-use
- Simple, short, straightforward processes
- Feedback at every step
- Navigating complexity
- Auditability and openness
- Proportionality
We recommend that digitally-capable super complainants should be empowered to demand collective redress from technology-driven harms on the public’s behalf and to channel unresolved disputes between individuals and companies. And we call on the Government to support coordination for civil society organisations helping people to address the impacts of technology-driven harms on their lives.
Click to download a copy of the People, Power & Technology: The 2020 Digital Attitudes Report
About BritainThinks
BritainThinks is one of the UK’s leading insight and strategy consultancies, delivering research for clients across government, business and the third sector. For further information visit https://britainthinks.com/
About DotEveryone
Doteveryone is the responsible technology think tank that’s fighting for better tech for everyone. In 2018 we partnered to conduct a nationally representative survey and focus groups to benchmark the public’s appetite, understanding and tolerance towards the impacts of tech on their lives.
For further information visit https://www.doteveryone.org.uk/