Literature DB >> 19487207

Information security: where computer science, economics and psychology meet.

Ross Anderson1, Tyler Moore.   

Abstract

Until ca. 2000, information security was seen as a technological discipline, based on computer science but with mathematics helping in the design of ciphers and protocols. That perspective started to change as researchers and practitioners realized the importance of economics. As distributed systems are increasingly composed of machines that belong to principals with divergent interests, incentives are becoming as important to dependability as technical design. A thriving new field of information security economics provides valuable insights not just into 'security' topics such as privacy, bugs, spam and phishing, but into more general areas of system dependability and policy. This research programme has recently started to interact with psychology. One thread is in response to phishing, the most rapidly growing form of online crime, in which fraudsters trick people into giving their credentials to bogus websites; a second is through the increasing importance of security usability; and a third comes through the psychology-and-economics tradition. The promise of this multidisciplinary research programme is a novel framework for analysing information security problems-one that is both principled and effective.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19487207     DOI: 10.1098/rsta.2009.0027

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Philos Trans A Math Phys Eng Sci        ISSN: 1364-503X            Impact factor:   4.226


  1 in total

1.  Can You Hear Me Now? Audio and Visual Interactions That Change App Choices.

Authors:  Shakthidhar Reddy Gopavaram; Omkar Bhide; L Jean Camp
Journal:  Front Psychol       Date:  2020-10-15
  1 in total

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