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Exploring undergraduate interactions with mobile privacy and security

Many studies have proven that digital natives are not as tech-savvy as previously thought, and possibly vulnerable in terms of privacy and security. My focus was to characterise how this generation interacted with mobile privacy and security. We provide evidence from a cohort of South African studen...

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Main Author: Till, Sarina
Other Authors: Densmore, Melissa
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Computer Science 2020
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access_status_str Open Access
author Till, Sarina
author2 Densmore, Melissa
author_browse Densmore, Melissa
Till, Sarina
author_facet Densmore, Melissa
Till, Sarina
author_sort Till, Sarina
collection Thesis
description Many studies have proven that digital natives are not as tech-savvy as previously thought, and possibly vulnerable in terms of privacy and security. My focus was to characterise how this generation interacted with mobile privacy and security. We provide evidence from a cohort of South African students, using this to discuss areas in which they need to be protected. We employed a web-based survey of 77 students, supplemented by in-depth interviews with 10 additional students. In both cases, we enquired about knowledge of permissions, encryption and application installation practices. With the in-depth interviews we also observed students as they installed two applications, one of which over-requested permissions. Our findings showed that most students (80%) did not look for- or understand permissions, did not understand or look for encryption, and used location-based services unsafely. Based on these results, we argue that digital natives lack the technical skills to properly engage with mobile privacy and security. Furthermore, digital natives do not understand mobile security and privacy features and therefore ignore them. Digital natives trust the authors of software and fail to act securely when security and privacy features are requested out of context. We further argue that this generation of digital natives has been so overexposed to mobile requests that violate their privacy and security that they have become desensitised to them. We further argue that digital natives’ definition of privacy is different from that of previous generations. Lastly, we discuss the implications of our findings for Higher Education Institutions, Higher Education Policy and mobile application design.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
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license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2020
publishDateRange 2020
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publisher Department of Computer Science
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/31261 Exploring undergraduate interactions with mobile privacy and security Till, Sarina Densmore, Melissa Computer Science Many studies have proven that digital natives are not as tech-savvy as previously thought, and possibly vulnerable in terms of privacy and security. My focus was to characterise how this generation interacted with mobile privacy and security. We provide evidence from a cohort of South African students, using this to discuss areas in which they need to be protected. We employed a web-based survey of 77 students, supplemented by in-depth interviews with 10 additional students. In both cases, we enquired about knowledge of permissions, encryption and application installation practices. With the in-depth interviews we also observed students as they installed two applications, one of which over-requested permissions. Our findings showed that most students (80%) did not look for- or understand permissions, did not understand or look for encryption, and used location-based services unsafely. Based on these results, we argue that digital natives lack the technical skills to properly engage with mobile privacy and security. Furthermore, digital natives do not understand mobile security and privacy features and therefore ignore them. Digital natives trust the authors of software and fail to act securely when security and privacy features are requested out of context. We further argue that this generation of digital natives has been so overexposed to mobile requests that violate their privacy and security that they have become desensitised to them. We further argue that digital natives’ definition of privacy is different from that of previous generations. Lastly, we discuss the implications of our findings for Higher Education Institutions, Higher Education Policy and mobile application design. 2020-02-24T11:34:55Z 2020-02-24T11:34:55Z 2018 2020-02-24T11:02:13Z Master Thesis Masters MPhil http://hdl.handle.net/11427/31261 eng application/pdf Department of Computer Science Faculty of Science
spellingShingle Computer Science
Till, Sarina
Exploring undergraduate interactions with mobile privacy and security
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Exploring undergraduate interactions with mobile privacy and security
title_full Exploring undergraduate interactions with mobile privacy and security
title_fullStr Exploring undergraduate interactions with mobile privacy and security
title_full_unstemmed Exploring undergraduate interactions with mobile privacy and security
title_short Exploring undergraduate interactions with mobile privacy and security
title_sort exploring undergraduate interactions with mobile privacy and security
topic Computer Science
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/31261
work_keys_str_mv AT tillsarina exploringundergraduateinteractionswithmobileprivacyandsecurity