Thursday, June 19, 2025
ADVT 
Tech

Ignore online security warnings at your own risk

Darpan News Desk IANS, 21 Nov, 2014 12:27 PM
    People are their own worst enemies when it comes to online security, a study indicates.
     
    People care about keeping their computers secure, security warnings are conveniently ignored while accessing risky websites, found an experiment by American researchers.
     
    "We see these messages so much that we stop thinking about them. In a sense, we don't even see them anymore, and so we often ignore them and proceed anyway," said lead author Anthony Vance from Brigham Young University (BYU).
     
    Their test involved a group of college students who were asked how they felt about online security.
     
    The participants were told to use their own laptops to log on to a website to categorise pictures of Batman as animated or photographed.
     
    As the participants clicked through images, warning signs would randomly pop up indicating malware issues with the site they were accessing.
     
    Researchers found that participants repeatedly ignored web security warnings.
     
    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 behaviour than a person's own response," Vance said, adding that "with neuroscience, we are trying to understand this weakest link and understand how we can fortify it".
     
    The study was published in the Journal of the Association for Information Systems.

    MORE Tech ARTICLES

    Dead battery gets charged in two minutes!

    Dead battery gets charged in two minutes!
    By using a common ingredient found in sunscreen, researchers from the Nanyang Technological University in Singapore have developed...

    Dead battery gets charged in two minutes!

    App that enables deaf people to 'hear'

    App that enables deaf people to 'hear'
    In pleasant news for the hearing impaired, researchers have developed a new app called Transcense which transcribes speech into written...

    App that enables deaf people to 'hear'

    Project to scan 'social pollution' on Twitter

    Project to scan 'social pollution' on Twitter
    Researchers at the Indiana University in the US are working on an ambitious project to collect and analyse 'social pollution' that is spreading on...

    Project to scan 'social pollution' on Twitter

    Now, Listen To Music On Twitter

    Now, Listen To Music On Twitter
    The micro-blogging site Twitter has added a new feature to allow its users to listen music directly from the twitter stream on mobile devices.

    Now, Listen To Music On Twitter

    Facebook May Become Top Video Sharing Site: Report

    Facebook May Become Top Video Sharing Site: Report
     Videos on Facebook are fast catching up with YouTube in terms of number of shares and the social networking site may overtake YouTube in video sharing through its news feed soon, say researchers.

    Facebook May Become Top Video Sharing Site: Report

    Unveiled: Apple's iPad Air 2, iMac Retina 5K, iPad Mini 3

    Unveiled: Apple's iPad Air 2, iMac Retina 5K, iPad Mini 3
    Apple unveiled the latest versions of its iPad Air, iMac Retina 5K and iPad Mini at an event at its headquarters in Cupertino, California, on Thursday.

    Unveiled: Apple's iPad Air 2, iMac Retina 5K, iPad Mini 3