Our second-ever national survey of public opinion about tech companies is out. Facebook and Twitter really lag behind the rest of the pack https://t.co/NjRxSXtsTx pic.twitter.com/RUDBdDl3mM
— Casey Newton (@CaseyNewton) March 2, 2020
Ouch...! Twitter scored lower / worse than Facebook in @verge's Tech Survey for 2020...
— Matt Navarra (@MattNavarra) March 2, 2020
Full results: https://t.co/CfmtaikogQ pic.twitter.com/xDfFpWrf5j
Only 38% of people know Facebook owns Instagram, and only 29% know the company owns WhatsApp pic.twitter.com/FdQ8dWkITx
— The Verge (@verge) March 2, 2020
Interesting to see that no more people trust Apple than Google with their information - 69% - despite the former's focus on privacy and security. https://t.co/RuPDmv8Zak pic.twitter.com/uEXPBNT4Ss
— Rob Price (@robaeprice) March 2, 2020
Once again, despite intense criticism, Amazon proves to be the most beloved company with 91% of people saying they viewed it favorably pic.twitter.com/HIo4nZcD6X
— The Verge (@verge) March 2, 2020
I’m always amused by people who declare they’re quitting @Facebook over its corporate privacy policies and bad ethics, but staying on @instagram, which has the same ownership and corporate leadership. This is an interesting survey by @verge. https://t.co/ADOJgf5d9j
— Walt Mossberg (@waltmossberg) March 2, 2020
Verge Tech Survey 2020! Two results that stand out from our nationally-representative poll: 1. No one has any idea that Facebook owns Instagram and 2. Google and Amazon remain utterly beloved https://t.co/HS98KfVIBv pic.twitter.com/lrV8bDfszW
— nilay patel (@reckless) March 2, 2020
The most trustworthy big tech company when it comes to protecting personal information was Microsoft, followed closely by Amazon, Netflix, and Apple; the least trustworthy were Facebook and Twitter, with fewer than half of respondents saying they trusted them pic.twitter.com/SRrRGu8JXn
— The Verge (@verge) March 2, 2020
I bet that if you tried to guess the the amount of trust that most Americans feel for Amazon, Google, Microsoft, Facebook and Apple ....you would get it wrong.https://t.co/gAaSH9B2ex
— Dieter Bohn (@backlon) March 2, 2020
shockingly people seem to really truly love the “push a button and get anything in the universe delivered to your house” machine and the “push a button get any question in the universe answered” machine https://t.co/qJNDdo5aET pic.twitter.com/PktJ7I8qSV
— Andrew J. Hawkins ???? (@andyjayhawk) March 2, 2020
Also these favourability ratings are in some ways astonishingly high. Ninety per cent for YouTube.... https://t.co/1mJpniSO5b
— emily bell (@emilybell) March 2, 2020
56% of respondents said the government should break up tech companies if they control too much of the economy. See the full results here: https://t.co/pJfgYyR6NF
— The Verge (@verge) March 2, 2020
If opinions flow to legislation then tech transformed@verge survey
— Ross Dawson (@rossdawson) March 2, 2020
56% - government should break up tech companies if they control too much of the economy
72% - Facebook has too much power
51% - Google and YouTube should be split into separate companieshttps://t.co/Iq3tokZxqz
Our second-ever national survey of public opinion about tech companies is out. Facebook and Twitter really lag behind the rest of the pack https://t.co/NjRxSXtsTx pic.twitter.com/RUDBdDl3mM
— Casey Newton (@CaseyNewton) March 2, 2020
* 56 percent said the government should break up tech companies if they control too much of the economy
— Matt Stoller (@matthewstoller) March 2, 2020
* 72 percent said that Facebook has too much power
* 51 percent said Google and YouTube should be split into separate companieshttps://t.co/8OHiaq7EAu
I am amazed that 41% of people trust facebook with their data. 41% too many. But why in the hell would 73% of you trust Amazon whose plan is literally to put a listening device in your house. #dataprotection #digitalhealth https://t.co/selCiQagKs pic.twitter.com/M6rscXmQmd
— James Kinross (@bowelsurgeon) March 2, 2020
Ouch...! Twitter scored lower / worse than Facebook in @verge's Tech Survey for 2020...
— Matt Navarra (@MattNavarra) March 2, 2020
Full results: https://t.co/CfmtaikogQ pic.twitter.com/xDfFpWrf5j
The Verge Tech Survey 2020: how people really feel about Apple, Google, Facebook, Amazon and more https://t.co/ZZLzJQQSir pic.twitter.com/32Ubsu8aXH
— The Verge (@verge) March 2, 2020
The Verge Tech Survey 2020: how people feel about Apple, Google, Facebook, and more: https://t.co/fCdp4l5prP pic.twitter.com/RuZwnwwDOD
— Robert Nyman (@robertnyman) March 2, 2020
You would have to scroll past the entire @voxdotcom article on “anti-tech sentiment” to find their own poll shows highly favorable ratings for tech companies. https://t.co/DNasewm3eK pic.twitter.com/FSBOCZptJ8
— Phalgun (@phalgun_r) March 3, 2020
@Verge reports that almost 3/4 of Americans think #Facebook has too much power. @counteringcrime agrees. #deletefacebook https://t.co/jQfeqiyTmM
— Gretchen Peters (@GretchenSPeters) March 2, 2020
This is how much Americans trust Facebook, Google, Apple, and other big tech companies - The Verge https://t.co/GsBT9eTd3y via @nuzzel
— Azeem Azhar (@azeem) March 3, 2020
The Verge Tech Survey 2020: how people really feel about Apple, Google, Facebook, Amazon and more https://t.co/EgqGcoUsXI pic.twitter.com/MrPlMNnk19
— The Verge (@verge) March 3, 2020
Americans really like their Amazon! As someone in Sweden, that's still largely Amazon-free, these surveys are fascinating (and make me wonder what I'm missing). https://t.co/iJ3qRflKBA pic.twitter.com/lYG88u26we
— Sven Grundberg (@svengrundberg) March 2, 2020
This is how much Americans trust Facebook, Google, Apple, and other big tech companies. Microsoft leads big tech companies in the number of Americans who say they trust it, at 75 percent of survey respondents. https://t.co/XcQL3WhnUd via @Verge
— Vishnu Nath ?????⌨️? (@VishnuNath) March 3, 2020