Americans have finally started to lose faith in tech companies' ability to protect their information, according to a survey fielded by HarrisX, a research consultancy, within 24 hours of Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg’s testimony before Congress this month.

Expand chart Reproduced from Inaugural Tech Media Telecom Pulse Survey, HarrisX; Chart: Axios Visuals

And, the survey also finds that the majority of people want government to do more to regulate Big Tech, especially social media companies.

The numbers that matter:

83% think we need tougher regulations and penalties for breaches of data privacy.

67% support major online privacy and security legislation being considered in the U.S. (such as Consent Act) and Europe (GDPR).

65% support the Honest Ads Act requiring political advertisements on social media to list who paid for them, just like political ads on radio, print and TV.

59% say they support an Under 16 Privacy Bill of Rights, to ensure kids under 16 have the right to have their online data permanently deleted.

53% believe large technology companies should be regulated by the federal government the way big banks are.

Yes, but: 38% think the federal government isn’t capable of regulating large tech companies, while 31% think it is capable.

Bottom line: A majority (58%) of people believe regulation of Facebook and other social media companies is inevitable. But it’s not clear they trust the government to get it right: 49% say of congressional representatives do not understand how Facebook works.