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Net users told to get safe online in U.K.

Widespread ignorance about basic computer security in UK is putting millions of people at risk from net-savvy criminals, a survey suggests.

It found 83% of 1,000 people questioned were not doing enough to protect themselves online, with 53% saying they did not know how to improve security.

It coincides with a Get Safe Online campaign backed by the National Hi-Tech Crime Unit and the government.

"Increasingly we are seeing organised criminals turning to the internet as a vehicle for their criminality," said Sharon Lemon, head of the crime unit.

The Get Safe Online campaign is a national initiative aimed at the general public that will try to combat ignorance about basic computer security.

Headed by the government and the National Hi-Tech Crime Unit, the campaign is also backed by companies such as eBay, Microsoft, BT and Yell.

The education campaign will use a website and a national tour aimed at getting people thinking about staying safe when they use the web.

The survey, conducted to support the campaign launch, found that 17% said net crime was the everyday threat they worried about most.

Almost half, 49%, said businesses should tackle it and 11% think the government should take it on.The survey also found that those who were doing something to protect themselves often did not do enough.

A quarter of those questioned said they had no firewall sitting between their computer and the web and 20% had no anti-virus software to stop malicious programs finding and compromising their PC.

Some bad user habits were revealed by the survey too. It found that 22% of people opened attachments on e-mails from people they did not know - one of the many routes malicious hackers use to get viruses, worms and spyware onto PCs.

1,000 people across the UK were interviewed in August for the survey.

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