According to the Digital Superstitions survey by Kaspersky*, more than half of the respondents in Saudi Arabia (73%) do not post photos with their partners or spouses on social networks. Kaspersky is shedding light on how users feel about posting photos with their loved ones.
Posting personal photos on social media can have certain negative consequences. Due to data breaches, photos can get accessible to unintended audiences, risking personal information exposure. Cybercriminals might use photos to gather information for identity theft or phishing attacks. Location data embedded in photos can even compromise physical security by revealing a user's whereabouts.
Users provide different reasons for refraining from posting photos with their loved ones. In most cases (61%) people do not want anyone to know about their personal life. Every eighth (16%) respondent does not like how they look on the photos. 24% of respondents said that their partner does not want the joint photos shared publicly (men voiced this opinion more often than women). Apart from that, 25% of people surveyed are afraid that they or their relationships may get jinxed if photos are shared publicly.
“In some cases, photos on social networks can become a source of information for intruders and cybercriminals – especially if they are accompanied by explicit captions or geotags. One of the possible risks is to face doxing. This is a phenomenon in which ill-wishers publicly post information about a person in order to harm their reputation or cause persecution. Doxers use, for example, personal photos or videos that can put a person in an awkward position, fragments of personal correspondence - usually taken out of context, home address, phone number, information about the place of work, etc. Therefore, before posting a photo with a description – personal or shared with another person – it is important to think about whether such a publication can do harm, and ask permission to post a post," says Emad Haffar, Head of Technical Experts at Kaspersky.
To ensure that posting photos on social networks brings only joy, Kaspersky recommends: