Why do people adopt, or reject, smartphone security tools?

Alkaldi, N. and Renaud, K.; Clarke, Nathan L. and Furnell, Steven M., eds. (2016) Why do people adopt, or reject, smartphone security tools? In: 10th International Symposium on Human Aspects of Information Security and Assurance, HAISA 2016, 2016-07-19 - 2016-07-21.

[thumbnail of Alkaldi-Renaud-HAISA2016-Why-people-adopt-reject-smartphone-security-tools]
Preview
Text. Filename: Alkaldi_Renaud_HAISA2016_Why_people_adopt_reject_smartphone_security_tools.pdf
Final Published Version

Download (375kB)| Preview

Abstract

A large variety of security tools exist for Smartphones, to help their owners to secure the phones and prevent unauthorised others from accessing their data and services. These range from screen locks to antivirus software to password managers. Yet many Smartphone owners do not use these tools despite their being free and easy to use. We were interested in exploring this apparent anomaly. A number of researchers have applied existing models of behaviour from other disciplines to try to understand these kinds of behaviours in a security context, and a great deal of research has examined adoption of screen locking mechanisms. We review the proposed models and consider how they might fail to describe adoption behaviours. We then present the Integrated Model of Behaviour Prediction (IMBP), a richer model than the ones tested thus far. We consider the kinds of factors that could be incorporated into this model in order to understand Smartphone owner adoption, or rejection, of security tools. The model seems promising, based on existing literature, and we plan to test its efficacy in future studies.