• DocumentCode
    3714130
  • Title

    An ethnographic study to assess the enactment of information security culture in a retail store

  • Author

    Andrews Greig;Karen Renaud;Stephen Flowerday

  • Author_Institution
    School of Computing Science University of Glasgow Glasgow, United Kingdom
  • fYear
    2015
  • Firstpage
    61
  • Lastpage
    66
  • Abstract
    The behaviour of the employee has the potential to either strengthen or weaken security, and it is therefore vital to foster a culture of security within organizations. The hope is that such a culture will ensure that behaviour becomes more secure over time, essentially reducing security incidents. Organizations attempt to nurture such a culture, mostly by means of educating their employees and having a comprehensive set of regularly-updated security policies. They are required to carry out regular security audits. These are usually in the form of checkbox-type assessments, ascertaining that the organization has all the correct mechanisms in place to maximize security of information. We carried out an ethnographic investigation into the security culture of a single retail store that is part of a large nationwide organization in the United Kingdom. The study surprisingly revealed poor security culture, despite the organization as a whole seemingly following good practice with respect to education and policy.
  • Keywords
    "Information security","Companies","Interviews","Education","Guidelines"
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Internet Security (WorldCIS), 2015 World Congress on
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/WorldCIS.2015.7359415
  • Filename
    7359415