Exploiting Curiosity and Context - How to Make People Click on a Dangerous Link

Exploiting Curiosity and Context - How to Make People Click on a Dangerous Link

Black Hat via YouTube Direct link

Study 1 vs. Study 2: Survey Reliability

11 of 22

11 of 22

Study 1 vs. Study 2: Survey Reliability

Class Central Classrooms beta

YouTube videos curated by Class Central.

Classroom Contents

Exploiting Curiosity and Context - How to Make People Click on a Dangerous Link

Automatically move to the next video in the Classroom when playback concludes

  1. 1 Introduction
  2. 2 Technical vs. Human Vulnerabilities
  3. 3 Research questions
  4. 4 Study Idea
  5. 5 Ethics: Recruitment
  6. 6 Ethics: Connecting Behavior with Survey
  7. 7 Final Design
  8. 8 Study 1: Survey
  9. 9 Study 2: Design Changes
  10. 10 Addressing by Name
  11. 11 Study 1 vs. Study 2: Survey Reliability
  12. 12 Study 2: Email vs. Facebook Survey Reliability
  13. 13 Trust Into Technical Context
  14. 14 Reasons for Non clicking
  15. 15 Limitations
  16. 16 Targeting
  17. 17 Requirements on Users
  18. 18 Let me introduce...
  19. 19 Want Your Employees Be Aware of Spear Phishing?
  20. 20 Pentesting & Patching Humans
  21. 21 Feasible User Involvement?
  22. 22 Key Takeaways

Never Stop Learning.

Get personalized course recommendations, track subjects and courses with reminders, and more.

Someone learning on their laptop while sitting on the floor.