Apparently, we have been caught slipping. We have slipped from 4th to 7th place in global cybersecurity awareness, and because of that our communities face some unexpected digital risks.
The recent National Privacy Test reveals a troubling trend: while we excel at creating strong passwords (96%) and spotting suspicious streaming offers (95%), we’re dangerously unprepared for emerging threats, particularly those involving artificial intelligence.
The data tells a sobering story. Only 5% of Canadians recognize the privacy issues when using AI at work. Merely 30% can identify a phishing website, and just 16% know how to store passwords safely. These represent vulnerabilities that could devastate families already navigating systemic barriers.
For the African Caribbean community, these challenges strike deeper. Our historical relationship with surveillance and institutional mistrust naturally creates technology aversion. Yet, this same caution, once protective, now leaves us exposed. When only 14% of Canadians know how to secure home Wi-Fi networks, and merely 12% understand what data internet providers collect, our community conversations and family connections become potential surveillance points.
The gap between what we know and what we need to know widens daily. While awareness of online privacy tools increased by 6 percentage points, and recognition of AI-powered scams grew by 3%, these improvements can’t match the rapidly evolving threat landscape. Trust me when I say, criminals don’t wait for us to catch up.
Here is what gives me hope: the fundamentals of protection remain accessible. The same community networks that have sustained us through generations can now become our digital defense system. When 67% of Canadians are classified as “Cyber Adventurers” (knowledgeable but with room to improve) there are learning opportunities.
Our path forward requires both individual action and community wisdom. We must:
- Create unique passwords for each account, perhaps using phrases from our stories and traditions that only we would know.
- Enable multi-factor authentication, treating it like the double-locking of doors our grandparents insisted upon.
- Update software regularly, viewing it as maintenance as essential as caring for our homes.
- Use VPNs to encrypt connections, creating private spaces even in public digital environments.
- Review privacy settings with the same attention we give to who we let into our homes.
The most striking finding? Lithuanians score highest globally with 62/100 points, proving that excellence in digital protection is about prioritization and education. If they can achieve this, so can we, especially when we leverage our community’s natural inclination toward collective protection.
As cybersecurity threats evolve, they increasingly target our most vulnerable moments: when we are connecting with loved ones, seeking opportunities, or preserving our cultural heritage. By developing digital literacy together, we transform cybersecurity from an intimidating technical challenge into an extension of our community values.