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
Link To Document