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17th Annual Computer Security Applications Conference (ACSAC'01)
Why Information Security is Hard-An Economic Perspective
New Orleans, Lousiana
December 10-December 14
ISBN: 0-7695-1405-7
R. Anderson, University of Cambridge Computer Laboratory
According to one common view, information security comes down to technical measures. Given better access control policy models, formal proofs of crypto-graphic 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.
Citation:
R. Anderson, "Why Information Security is Hard-An Economic Perspective," acsac, pp.0358, 17th Annual Computer Security Applications Conference (ACSAC'01), 2001
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