Suchergebnisse
Filter
26 Ergebnisse
Sortierung:
SSRN
Working paper
Analysis of Ecrime in Crowd-Sourced Labor Markets: Mechanical Turk vs. Freelancer
In: The Economics of Information Security and Privacy, S. 301-321
IoT Marketplace: Willingness-To-Pay vs. Willingness-To-Accept
In: In Proceedings of the 20th Annual Workshop on the Economics of Information Security (WEIS 2021).
SSRN
Quantifying Susceptibility to Spear Phishing in a High School Environment Using Signal Detection Theory
In: Proceedings of the Fourteenth International Symposium on Human Aspects of Information Security & Assurance (HAISA 2020)
SSRN
Non-Inclusive Online Security: Older Adults' Experience with Two-Factor Authentication
In: In Proceedings of the 54th Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences.
SSRN
American Privacy Perceptions in the COVID Pandemic
The on-going COVID-19 pandemic has brought surveillance and privacy concerns to the forefront, given that contact tracing has been seen as a very effective tool to prevent the spread of infectious disease and that public authorities and government officials hope to use it to contain the spread of COVID-19. On the other hand, the rejection of contact tracing tools has also been widely reported, partly due to privacy concerns. We conducted an online survey to identify participants' privacy concerns and their risk perceptions during the on-going COVID-19 pandemic. Our results contradict media claims that people are more willing to share their private information in a public health crisis. We identified a significant difference depending on the information recipient, the type of device, the intended purpose, and thus concretize the claims rather than suggesting a fundamental difference. We note that participants' privacy preferences are largely impacted by their perceived autonomy and the perceived severity of consequences related to privacy risks. Contrarily, even during an on-going COVID-19 pandemic, health risk perceptions had limited influence on participants' privacy preference, given only the perceived newness of the risk could weakly increase their comfort level. Finally, our results show that participants' computer expertise has a positive influence on their privacy preference while their knowledge to security make them less comfortable with sharing.
BASE
Cross-National Study on Phishing Resilience
In: In Proceedings of the Workshop on Usable Security and Privacy (USEC), 2021
SSRN
Why Don't Older Adults Adopt Two-Factor Authentication?
In: Proceedings of the 2020 SIGCHI Workshop on Designing Interactions for the Ageing Populations - Addressing Global Challenges.
SSRN
SSRN
Working paper
Privacy, Technology, and Aging: A Proposed Framework
In: Ageing international, Band 36, Heft 2, S. 232-252
ISSN: 1936-606X
Panel: Humans and Technology for Inclusive Privacy and Security
In: In Proceedings of the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society Annual Meeting, October 2020, Online.
SSRN
Working paper