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by jbpetersen
3346 days ago
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Abstract: According to one common view, information security
comes down to technical measures. Given better
access control policy models, formal proofs of cryptographic
protocols, approved firewalls, better ways of detecting
intrusions and malicious code, and better tools
for system evaluation and assurance, the problems can
be solved.
In this note, I put forward a contrary view: information
insecurity is at least as much due to perverse
incentives. Many of the problems can be explained
more clearly and convincingly using the language of
microeconomics: network externalities, asymmetric
information, moral hazard, adverse selection, liability
dumping and the tragedy of the commons. |
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