YoVDO

All Security Is Good(s)- Design Guidance for Economics - L Jean Camp - USENIX Enigma Conference - 2020

Offered By: USENIX Enigma Conference via YouTube

Tags

USENIX Enigma Conference Courses Risk Management Courses Public Goods Courses Data Exfiltration Courses Phishing Detection Courses

Course Description

Overview

Explore the economic aspects of security adoption and privacy paradoxes in this 23-minute conference talk from USENIX Enigma 2020. Delve into why individuals may rationally choose not to invest in security, underestimate risks, or find solutions unusable. Examine various research perspectives, including classic economic views on privacy and market efficiency. Learn about incentive-aligned design, the economics of security, and the conversion of economic information into goods. Gain insights from specific examples of successes and failures in security adoption, and understand the economic component of acceptability issues in security. Discover how topics such as Bitcoin hijacking, crime hotspots, public goods, phishing detection, and nation-state actors relate to the broader discussion of security economics.

Syllabus

Intro
Border Gateway Protocol
Why Does It Matter
No Control Plane
Internet Pass
Introduction Slide
Economics
Bitcoin Hijacking
Bitcoin Mining Pool
Why Do People Commit Crime
Hotspots
Cisco
Outliers
Redefining the Problem
Rival Risk
Public Goods
NonExcludable Goods
IP Addresses
Phishing Detection
What are hijacks
Nationstate actors
Denver
Surveillance Infrastructure
Better Crypto
PKI Origin
BGP SEC
Mismatches
Facebook Traffic
Individual Autonomy
Bongo
Data Exfiltration
Financial ISPs
NationState
Conclusion


Taught by

USENIX Enigma Conference

Related Courses

Microeconomics Principles
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign via Coursera
Microeconomics: When Markets Fail
University of Pennsylvania via Coursera
APĀ® Microeconomics
Massachusetts Institute of Technology via edX
Introduction to Environmental Economics
Indian Institute of Technology Roorkee via Swayam
Principles of Microeconomics: Social Microeconomics
University of Queensland via edX