Authors
Michelle L Mazurek, JP Arsenault, Joanna Bresee, Nitin Gupta, Iulia Ion, Christina Johns, Daniel Lee, Yuan Liang, Jenny Olsen, Brandon Salmon, Richard Shay, Kami Vaniea, Lujo Bauer, Lorrie Faith Cranor, Gregory R Ganger, Michael K Reiter
Publication date
2010/4/10
Conference
Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
Pages
645-654
Publisher
ACM
Description
As digital content becomes more prevalent in the home, non-technical users are increasingly interested in sharing that content with others and accessing it from multiple devices. Not much is known about how these users think about controlling access to this data. To better understand this, we conducted semi-structured, in-situ interviews with 33 users in 15 households. We found that users create ad-hoc access-control mechanisms that do not always work; that their ideal policies are complex and multi-dimensional; that a priori policy specification is often insufficient; and that people's mental models of access control and security are often misaligned with current systems. We detail these findings and present a set of associated guidelines for designing usable access-control systems for the home environment.
Total citations
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Scholar articles
ML Mazurek, JP Arsenault, J Bresee, N Gupta, I Ion… - Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human …, 2010
ML Mazurek, JP Arsenault, J Bresee, N Gupta, I Ion… - CHI, 2010