Toward understanding social engineering


Autoria(s): Algarni, Abdullah; Xu, Yue; Chan, Taizan; Tian, Yu-Chu
Data(s)

01/11/2013

Resumo

There is no doubt that social engineering plays a vital role in compromising most security defenses, and in attacks on people, organizations, companies, or even governments. It is the art of deceiving and tricking people to reveal critical information or to perform an action that benefits the attacker in some way. Fraudulent and deceptive people have been using social engineering traps and tactics using information technology such as e-mails, social networks, web sites, and applications to trick victims into obeying them, accepting threats, and falling victim to various crimes and attacks such as phishing, sexual abuse, financial abuse, identity theft, impersonation, physical crime, and many other forms of attack. Although organizations, researchers, practitioners, and lawyers recognize the severe risk of social engineering-based threats, there is a severe lack of understanding and controlling of such threats. One side of the problem is perhaps the unclear concept of social engineering as well as the complexity of understand human behaviors in behaving toward, approaching, accepting, and failing to recognize threats or the deception behind them. The aim of this paper is to explain the definition of social engineering based on the related theories of the many related disciplines such as psychology, sociology, information technology, marketing, and behaviourism. We hope, by this work, to help researchers, practitioners, lawyers, and other decision makers to get a fuller picture of social engineering and, therefore, to open new directions of collaboration toward detecting and controlling it.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/67479/

Publicador

The International Association of IT Lawyers (IAITL)

Relação

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/67479/1/Toward_Understanding_Social_Engineering__Footnote_style.pdf

Algarni, Abdullah, Xu, Yue, Chan, Taizan, & Tian, Yu-Chu (2013) Toward understanding social engineering. In The Proceedings of the 8th International Conference on Legal, Security and Privacy Issues in IT Law, (Critical Analysis and Legal Reasoning), The International Association of IT Lawyers (IAITL), Bangkok, Thailand, pp. 279-300.

Direitos

Copyright 2013 the authors and the International Association of IT Lawyers (IAITL)

Fonte

School of Electrical Engineering & Computer Science; School of Information Systems; Science & Engineering Faculty

Palavras-Chave #080303 Computer System Security #080505 Web Technologies (excl. Web Search) #080609 Information Systems Management #Social Engineering #Information Security Management #Human Factor Security #Trust #Phishing #Deception
Tipo

Conference Paper