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Overwhelming Majority of Registered Voters Favor Encryption, Survey Finds

Eighty-seven percent of registered voters polled are very or somewhat concerned that a person or organization they don't trust could get access to private information stored on their electronic devices or mobile apps, ACT|The App Association found in a commissioned survey released Monday. On a media call, Doug Usher, who heads polling firm Purple Insights, said 71 percent of respondents believe the threat from cybercriminals and hackers is increasing, and only 2 percent think it is decreasing. Eighty percent said companies like Apple and Google should continue to build strong innovative safeguards to strengthen data encryption, and only 13 percent believe it's adequate, he said. More people trust companies than the federal government -- 54 percent vs. 21 percent, he said. Plus, overwhelming majorities, close to 90 percent, either believe back doors could be misused and make personal data more vulnerable or criminals and terrorists could use them to create additional threats. During the call, Purple Strategies CEO Steve McMahon, a longtime Democratic consultant, said it "surprised" him most that a "broad and universal agreement" exists among civil libertarians and national security supporters on all measures. "I suppose that's a good sign that it's not impossible to find common ground in Washington even today," he said. The nationwide survey of 1,250 registered voters was done via cellphone or landline April 11-14.