CybersecurityNew study shows people ignore online warnings

Published 21 November 2014

You are your own worst enemy when it comes to online security. Say you ignored one of those “this Web site is not trusted” warnings and it led to your computer being hacked. How would you react? Would you: (A) Quickly shut down your computer? (B) Yank out the cables? (C) Scream in cyber terror? Researchers report that that for a group of college students participating in a research experiment, all of the above were true. These gut reactions (and more) happened when a trio of researchers simulated hacking into study participants’ personal laptops.

The result of ignoring warnings // Source: byu.edu

You are your own worst enemy when it comes to online security.

Say you ignored one of those “this Web site is not trusted” warnings and it led to your computer being hacked. How would you react? Would you:

A. Quickly shut down your computer?

B. Yank out the cables?

C. Scream in cyber terror? A Brigham Young University release reports that for a group of college students participating in a research experiment, all of the above were true. These gut reactions (and more) happened when a trio of Brigham Young University researchers simulated hacking into study participants’ personal laptops.

“A lot of them freaked out — you could hear them audibly make noises from our observation rooms,” said Anthony Vance, assistant professor of Information Systems. “Several rushed in to say something bad had happened.”

Fortunately for the students, nothing bad had really happened. What they saw — a message from an “Algerian hacker” with a laughing skull and crossbones, a 10-second countdown timer and the words “Say goodbye to your computer” – was not real. What was real was that all of the participants got the message by ignoring Web security warnings.

Vance and BYU colleagues Bonnie Anderson and Brock Kirwan carried out the experiment better to understand how people deal with online security risks, such as malware. They found that people say they care about keeping their computers secure, but behave otherwise — in this case, they plowed through malware warnings.

“We see these messages so much that we stop thinking about them,” Vance said. “In a sense, we don’t even see them anymore, and so we often ignore them and proceed anyway.”

For the study, researchers first asked participants how they felt about online security. Then, in a seemingly unrelated task, participants were told to use their own laptops to log on to a Web site to categorize pictures of Batman as animated or photographed. (Students were told their image classification project was being used to check the accuracy of a computer algorithm to do the same task.)

As participants clicked through the image pages, warning signs would randomly pop up indicating malware issues with the site they were accessing. If they ignored the message enough times, they were “hacked.”

“A lot of people don’t realize that they are the weakest link in their computer security,” said Kirwan, assistant professor of Psychology and Neuroscience at BYU. “The operating systems we use have a lot of built-in security and the way for a hacker to get control of your computer is to get you to do something.”

Kirwan’s role in the research added another fascinating layer: Using his expertise in neuroscience, Kirwan carried out an additional experiment on subjects using EEG machines to measure brain responses to risk.

While results showed that people say they care about Web security but behave like they do not; they do behave in-line with what their brains say. In other words, people’s brainwaves better predict how risky they are with online security.

“We learned that brain data is a better predictor of security behavior than a person’s own response,” Vance said. “With neuroscience, we’re trying to understand this weakest link and understand how we can fortify it.”

Anderson, an associate professor of Information Systems, echoed the need to do so, quoting security expert Bruce Schneier: “Only amateurs attack machines; professionals target people.”

The folks at the National Science Foundation agree too and think the BYU trio are onto something. Anderson, Kirwan and Vance recently earned a $300,000 grant from the NSF for continued research of security behavior. The current study was published recently in the Journal of the Association for Information Systems.

— Read more in Anthony Vance et al., “Using Measures of Risk Perception to Predict Information Security Behavior: Insights from Electroencephalography (EEG),” Journal of the Association for Information Systems 15, no. 10, Article 2 (October 2014)