Millenials often like to pretend that they're the most tech-savvy generation out there, dismissing their parents as old relics who don't know the first thing about life online.

However, new research has shown that older generations are actually more likely to be secure online than younger digital natives.

The 2016 Norton Cybersecurity Insights Report has revealed that despite living virtually their entire lives online, millennials are more likely to use insecure online behaviour than baby boomers.

32 per cent of millennials in the UK share their passwords for online services while only 13 per cent of baby boomers do.

In addition, just 33 per cent of millennials said they always use a secure password - one consisting of at least eight letters, numbers and symbols. By contrast, the ratio of secure password use among baby boomers was 49 per cent.

Many millennials feel that security is simply not worth bothering over. One in three reportedly felt that security breaches no longer have any real consequences, due to their increasing frequency, while one in five felt like their chances of being compromised by cybercrime is negligible.

This has contributed to a much higher online crime rate among millennials, with 31 per cent reporting to have been victims of cybercrime.