DocumentCode
1908773
Title
Economic Incentives to Increase Security in the Internet: The Case for Insurance
Author
Lelarge, Marc ; Bolot, Jean
Author_Institution
NRIA-ENS
fYear
2009
fDate
19-25 April 2009
Firstpage
1494
Lastpage
1502
Abstract
Entities in the Internet, ranging from individuals and enterprises to service providers, face a broad range of epidemic risks such as worms, viruses, and botnet-driven attacks. Those risks are interdependent risks, which means that the decision by an entity to invest in security and self-protect affects the risk faced by others (for example, the risk faced by an individual decreases when its providers increases its investments in security). As a result of this, entities tend to invest too little in self-protection, relative to the socially efficient level, by ignoring benefits conferred on by others. In this paper, we consider the problem of designing incentives to entities in the Internet so that they invest at a socially efficient level. In particular, we find that insurance is a powerful incentive mechanism which pushes agents to invest in self-protection. Thus, insurance increases the level of self-protection, and therefore the level of security, in the Internet. As a result, we believe that insurance should be considered as an important component of risk management in the Internet.
Keywords
Internet; incentive schemes; insurance; risk management; security of data; Internet; economic incentives; insurance; risk management; security; self-protection; Computer crime; Computer viruses; Computer worms; IP networks; Insurance; Investments; Large-scale systems; Risk management; Security; Web and internet services;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
INFOCOM 2009, IEEE
Conference_Location
Rio de Janeiro
ISSN
0743-166X
Print_ISBN
978-1-4244-3512-8
Electronic_ISBN
0743-166X
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/INFCOM.2009.5062066
Filename
5062066
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