Usability and privacy: a study of Kazaa P2P file-sharing
Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
Web Privacy with P3p
Improving user-interface dependability through mitigation of human error
International Journal of Human-Computer Studies - Special isssue: HCI research in privacy and security is critical now
Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
Expandable grids: a user interface visualization technique and a policy semantics to support fast, accurate security and privacy policy authoring
Attribute-based, usefully secure email
Attribute-based, usefully secure email
Computational techniques for increasing PKI policy comprehension by human analysts
Proceedings of the 9th Symposium on Identity and Trust on the Internet
Using hierarchal change mining to manage network security policy evolution
Hot-ICE'11 Proceedings of the 11th USENIX conference on Hot topics in management of internet, cloud, and enterprise networks and services
Access control hygiene and the empathy gap in medical IT
HealthSec'12 Proceedings of the 3rd USENIX conference on Health Security and Privacy
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Prior work in psychology shows that introspection inhibits intuition: asking human users to analyze judgements they make can cause them to be quantitatively worse at making those judgments. In this paper, we explore whether this seemingly contradictory phenomenon also occurs when humans craft privacy policies for a Facebook-like social network. Our study presents empirical evidence that suggests the act of introspecting upon one's personal security policy actually makes one worse at making policy decisions; if one aims to reduce privacy spills, the data indicate that educating users before letting them set their privacy policies may actually increase the exposure of private information.