Lavanya Sajwan, James Noble, Craig Anslow (Victoria University of Wellington), Robert Biddle (Carleton University)

Technologies are continually adapting to match ever-changing trends. As this occurs, new vulnerabilities are exploited by malicious attackers and can cause significant economic damage to companies. Programmers must continually expand their knowledge and skills to protect software. Programmers make mistakes, and this is why we must interpret how they implement and adopt security practices. This paper reports on a study to understand programmer adoption of security practices. We identified a theory of inter-related influences involving programmer culture, organizational factors, and industry trends. Understanding these decisions can help inform organizational culture and education to improve software security.

View More Papers

HTTPS-Only: Upgrading all connections to https: in Web Browsers

Christoph Kerschbaumer, Julian Gaibler, Arthur Edelstein (Mozilla Corporation), Thyla van der Merwey (ETH Zurich)

Read More

(Short) WIP: End-to-End Analysis of Adversarial Attacks to Automated...

Hengyi Liang, Ruochen Jiao (Northwestern University), Takami Sato, Junjie Shen, Qi Alfred Chen (UC Irvine), and Qi Zhu (Northwestern University) Best Short Paper Award Winner!

Read More

KUBO: Precise and Scalable Detection of User-triggerable Undefined Behavior...

Changming Liu (Northeastern University), Yaohui Chen (Facebook Inc.), Long Lu (Northeastern University)

Read More

“This is different from the Western world”: Understanding Password...

Aniqa Alam, Elizabeth Stobert, Robert Biddle (Carleton University)

Read More