Guardado en:
Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Herbert, Franziska, Becker, Steffen, Buckmann, Annalina, Kowalewski, Marvin, Hielscher, Jonas, Acar, Yasemin, Dürmuth, Markus, Zou, Yixin, Sasse, M. Angela
Formato: Preprint
Publicado: 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://arxiv.org/abs/2212.12964
Etiquetas: Agregar Etiqueta
Sin Etiquetas, Sea el primero en etiquetar este registro!
_version_ 1866917599709757440
author Herbert, Franziska
Becker, Steffen
Buckmann, Annalina
Kowalewski, Marvin
Hielscher, Jonas
Acar, Yasemin
Dürmuth, Markus
Zou, Yixin
Sasse, M. Angela
author_facet Herbert, Franziska
Becker, Steffen
Buckmann, Annalina
Kowalewski, Marvin
Hielscher, Jonas
Acar, Yasemin
Dürmuth, Markus
Zou, Yixin
Sasse, M. Angela
contents This paper investigates the digital security experiences of four at-risk user groups in Germany, including older adults (70+), teenagers (14-17), people with migration backgrounds, and people with low formal education. Using computer-assisted telephone interviews, we sampled 250 participants per group, representative of region, gender, and partly age distributions. We examine their device usage, concerns, prior negative incidents, perceptions of potential attackers, and information sources. Our study provides the first quantitative and nationally representative insights into the digital security experiences of these four at-risk groups in Germany. Our findings show that participants with migration backgrounds used the most devices, sought more security information, and reported more experiences with cybercrime incidents than other groups. Older adults used the fewest devices and were least affected by cybercrimes. All groups relied on friends and family and online news as their primary sources of security information, with little concern about their social circles being potential attackers. We highlight the nuanced differences between the four at-risk groups and compare them to the broader German population when possible. We conclude by presenting recommendations for education, policy, and future research aimed at addressing the digital security needs of these at-risk user groups.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2212_12964
institution arXiv
publishDate 2022
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Digital Security -- A Question of Perspective. A Large-Scale Telephone Survey with Four At-Risk User Groups
Herbert, Franziska
Becker, Steffen
Buckmann, Annalina
Kowalewski, Marvin
Hielscher, Jonas
Acar, Yasemin
Dürmuth, Markus
Zou, Yixin
Sasse, M. Angela
Cryptography and Security
This paper investigates the digital security experiences of four at-risk user groups in Germany, including older adults (70+), teenagers (14-17), people with migration backgrounds, and people with low formal education. Using computer-assisted telephone interviews, we sampled 250 participants per group, representative of region, gender, and partly age distributions. We examine their device usage, concerns, prior negative incidents, perceptions of potential attackers, and information sources. Our study provides the first quantitative and nationally representative insights into the digital security experiences of these four at-risk groups in Germany. Our findings show that participants with migration backgrounds used the most devices, sought more security information, and reported more experiences with cybercrime incidents than other groups. Older adults used the fewest devices and were least affected by cybercrimes. All groups relied on friends and family and online news as their primary sources of security information, with little concern about their social circles being potential attackers. We highlight the nuanced differences between the four at-risk groups and compare them to the broader German population when possible. We conclude by presenting recommendations for education, policy, and future research aimed at addressing the digital security needs of these at-risk user groups.
title Digital Security -- A Question of Perspective. A Large-Scale Telephone Survey with Four At-Risk User Groups
topic Cryptography and Security
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2212.12964