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Section 4: Usable Security - Reference

Publications

  1. Security and Usability Designing Secure Systems that People Can Use, Lorrie Faith Cranor, Simson Garfinkel, O'Reilly, Aug 2005.
  2. A Brief Introduction To Usable Security, Bryan D. Payne, W. Keith Edwards, Georgia Institute of Technology
  3. Usable Security Why Do We Need It? How Do We Get It?, M. Angela Sasse And Ivan Flechais, ch02.9496, Page 13 , Aug 2005.
  4. Psychology of Security:why do good users make bad decisions?, CACM, Vol 51(4), April 2008
  5. Why Phishing Works? Rachna Dhamija, J. D. Tygar, Marti Hearst, CHI 2006
  6. A Framework for Reasoning About the Human in the Loop, Lorrie Faith Cranor, Usability, Psychology and Security 2008
  7. Designing for Usability: Key Principles and What Designers Think, John D. Gould, Clayton Lewis, CACM, Vol 28(3), March 1985
  8. Users are not the enemy, Anne Adams, Martina Angela Sasse, CACM, December 1999.
  9. School of Phish: A Real-World Evaluation of Anti-Phishing Training, Ponnurangam Kumaraguru, et. al., SOUPS 2009.
  10. Usability, Security And Privacy, Butler Lampson, Microsoft Research, Jul 2009.
  11. Heuristic Evaluation, Nielson J. and Mack, R. L. (eds), Usability Inspection Methods, John Wiley & Sons, 1994.
  12. User interaction design for secure systems, Yee, K. P., Proc. 4th Intl. Conf on Information and Communication Security (ICICS), Dec 2002.
  13. Guidelines and strategies for secure interation design, Cranor, L. and Garfinkel, S. (eds), Desiging secure systems that people can use, OReilliey, 2005.
  14. A usability study and critique of two password managers, USENIX security, 2006.
  15. Even experts deserve usable secuirty: design guidelines for security management systems, Chiasson S., Biddle R., and Somayaji A. USM (w/ SOUPS), 2007.
  16. Methodlogy matters: doing research in the behavioral and social sciences, McGrath J. E., Morgan Kaufmann Publishers Inc. San Francisco, CA, 1995.

Links

  1. Research On Usable Security, José Carlos Brustoloni
  2. Security and Usability, Carleton Computer Security Lab
  3. Anti-phishing Phil, CMU
  4. SOUPS

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This material is based upon work supported by the National Science Foundation under Grant No. 0736643. Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this material are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Science Foundation.