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User-Centered Security: Stepping Up to the Grand Challenge
Friday March 31, 2006
11:00 a.m. - 12:00 p.m.
Fuller Labs 320
User centered security has been identified as a grand challenge in
information security and assurance. It is on the brink of becoming an
established subdomain of both security and human/computer interface
(HCI) research, and an influence on the product development
lifecycle. Both security and HCI rely on the reality of interactions
with users to prove the utility and validity of their work. However,
the relationship each of these disciplines has to the user emphasizes
almost oppositional aspects.
As practitioners and researchers in those areas, we still face major
issues when applying even the most foundational tools used in either
of these fields across both of them. As a synthesis of existing
subjects, user centered security provides new insights and new
solutions, and the meeting place for some of our thorniest problems. I
will discuss the systemic roadblocks at the social, technical, and
practical levels that user centered security must overcome to make
substantial breakthroughs. Existing and ongoing research can be
brought to bear on some of them; new thinking, new disciplines, and
new paradigms will be needed for others.
Mary Ellen Zurko leads security architecture and strategy for Lotus
Workplace, Portal, and Collaboration Software at IBM. She defined the
field of User-Centered Security in 1996. She is on the steering
committee for New Security Paradigms Workshop and the International
World Wide Web Conference series. She has worked in security since
1986, at The Open Group Research Institute and Digital Equipment
Corporation, as well as IBM. She is a contributor to the O.Reilly
book, "Security and Usability: Designing Secure Systems that People
Can Use".
Host:
Craig Wills
Refreshments will be served.
Maintained by webmaster@cs.wpi.edu
Last modified:
Tue Feb 28 16:58:56 EST 2006
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