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Why Johnny can’t encrypt: A usability evaluation of PGP

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by Alma Whitten , J. D. Tygar
Citations:283 - 3 self
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@MISC{Whitten_whyjohnny,
    author = {Alma Whitten and J. D. Tygar},
    title = {Why Johnny can’t encrypt: A usability evaluation of PGP},
    year = {}
}

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Abstract

User errors cause or contribute to most computer security failures, yet user interfaces for security still tend to be clumsy, confusing, or near-nonexistent. Is this simply due to a failure to apply standard user interface design techniques to security? We argue that, on the contrary, effective security requires a different usability standard, and that it will not be achieved through the user interface design techniques appropriate to other types of consumer software. To test this hypothesis, we performed a case study of a security program which does have a good user interface by general standards: PGP 5.0. Our case study used a cognitive walkthrough analysis together with a laboratory user test to evaluate whether PGP 5.0 can be successfully used by cryptography novices to achieve effective electronic mail security. The analysis found a number of user interface design flaws that may contribute to security failures, and the user test demonstrated that when our test participants were given 90 minutes in which to sign and encrypt a message using PGP 5.0, the majority of them were unable to do so successfully. We conclude that PGP 5.0 is not usable enough to provide effective security for most computer users, despite its attractive graphical user interface, supporting our hypothesis that user interface design for effective security remains an open problem. We close with a brief description of our continuing work on the development and application of user interface design principles and techniques for security. 1

Citations

513 Safeware: System Safety and Computers - Leveson - 1995
252 Why cryptosystems fail - Anderson - 1994
192 Heuristic evaluation - Nielsen - 1994
140 Access Control for Collaborative Environments - Shen, Dewan - 1992
125 Handbook of Usability Testing: How to plan, design and conduct effective tests - Rubin - 2008
37 PGP: Pretty Good Privacy. O’Reilly & Associates - GARFINKEL - 1995
30 Compliance defects in public-key cryptography - Davis - 1996
19 Tygar, “Usability of security: A case study - Whitten, D - 1998
13 Writing Secure - Howard, LeBlanc
12 Iterative Usability Testing of a Security Application - Karat - 1989
8 Evaluating a Multimedia Authoring Tool with Cognitive Walkthrough and Think-Aloud User Studies - John, Mashyna - 1997
4 The cognitive walkthrough method: A practioner’s guide - Wharton, Rieman, et al. - 1994
3 User’s Guide for PGP for Personal Privacy, Version 5.0 for the Mac OS. Packaged with software - Privacy, Inc - 1997
3 Enhancing warning compliance through alternative product label designs - Wogalter, Young - 1994
1 UNIX Security: Threats and Solutions - Bishop
The National Science Foundation
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