
You might think you've got a great relationship built on a foundation of mutual trust. But just because you trust your partner, that doesn't mean your partner trusts you. Listen to this . . .
--According to a new study from the London School of Economics, the University of Oxford and Nottingham Trent University in the UK, 8% of men and 14% of women admit they read their partner's emails to make sure they're not cheating.
--7% of men and 13% of women admit they spy on their partner's text messages.
--6% of men and 10% of women check their partner's web browser history to see what they're looking at online.
--And 1% of men and women say they've even installed monitoring software to keep an eye on their partner's Internet habits.
--Even crazier . . . another 1% admits they've posed as someone else online, and tried to contact their partner just to see how they would respond. (???)
--A woman named Ellen Helsper led the study. She says, quote:
--"Partner surveillance was wider spread than we initially assumed, with one out of every three couples having at least one partner who monitored the other partner's behavior using some kind of technological tool."
--In other words, if you've been cheating and there's evidence of it online, your partner might already know about it.
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