Security in Practice: Examining the Collaborative Management of Sensitive Information in Childcare Centers and Physicians' Offices

Traditionally, security has been conceptualized as rules, locks, and passwords. More recently, security research has explored how people interact in secure (or insecure) ways in part of a larger socio-technical system. Socio-technical systems are comprised of people, technology, relationships, and i...

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Main Author: Vega, Laurian
Other Authors: Computer Science
Format: Others
Published: Virginia Tech 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/37552
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-04062011-145435/
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-375522020-09-26T05:31:27Z Security in Practice: Examining the Collaborative Management of Sensitive Information in Childcare Centers and Physicians' Offices Vega, Laurian Computer Science Harrison, Steven R. Kafura, Dennis G. McCrickard, D. Scott Montague, Enid Tatar, Deborah G. Security Trust Privacy Usable Security Computer Supported Collaborative Work Traditionally, security has been conceptualized as rules, locks, and passwords. More recently, security research has explored how people interact in secure (or insecure) ways in part of a larger socio-technical system. Socio-technical systems are comprised of people, technology, relationships, and interactions that work together to create safe praxis. Because information systems are not just technical, but also social, the scope of privacy and security concerns must include social and technical factors. Clearly, computer security is enhanced by developments in the technical arena, where researchers are building ever more secure and robust systems to guard the privacy and confidentiality of information. However, when the definition of security is broadened to encompass both human and technical mechanisms, how security is managed with and through the day-to-day social work practices becomes increasingly important. In this dissertation I focus on how sensitive information is collaboratively managed in socio-technical systems by examining two domains: childcare centers and physiciansâ offices. In childcare centers, workers manage the enrolled children and also the enrolled childâ s personal information. In physiciansâ offices, workers manage the patientsâ health along with the patientsâ health information. My dissertation presents results from interviews and observations of these locations. The data collected consists of observation notes, interview transcriptions, pictures, and forms. The researchers identified breakdowns related to security and privacy. Using Activity Theory to first structure, categorize, and analyze the observed breakdowns, I used phenomenological methods to understand the context and experience of security and privacy. The outcomes from this work are three themes, along with corresponding future scenarios. The themes discussed are security embodiment, communities of security, and zones of ambiguity. Those themes extend the literature in the areas of usable security, human-computer interaction, and trust. The presentation will use future scenarios to examine the complexity of developing secure systems for the real world. Ph. D. 2014-03-14T21:10:15Z 2014-03-14T21:10:15Z 2011-03-28 2011-04-06 2011-05-06 2011-05-06 Dissertation etd-04062011-145435 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/37552 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-04062011-145435/ Dissertation.pdf In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Security
Trust
Privacy
Usable Security
Computer Supported Collaborative Work
spellingShingle Security
Trust
Privacy
Usable Security
Computer Supported Collaborative Work
Vega, Laurian
Security in Practice: Examining the Collaborative Management of Sensitive Information in Childcare Centers and Physicians' Offices
description Traditionally, security has been conceptualized as rules, locks, and passwords. More recently, security research has explored how people interact in secure (or insecure) ways in part of a larger socio-technical system. Socio-technical systems are comprised of people, technology, relationships, and interactions that work together to create safe praxis. Because information systems are not just technical, but also social, the scope of privacy and security concerns must include social and technical factors. Clearly, computer security is enhanced by developments in the technical arena, where researchers are building ever more secure and robust systems to guard the privacy and confidentiality of information. However, when the definition of security is broadened to encompass both human and technical mechanisms, how security is managed with and through the day-to-day social work practices becomes increasingly important. In this dissertation I focus on how sensitive information is collaboratively managed in socio-technical systems by examining two domains: childcare centers and physiciansâ offices. In childcare centers, workers manage the enrolled children and also the enrolled childâ s personal information. In physiciansâ offices, workers manage the patientsâ health along with the patientsâ health information. My dissertation presents results from interviews and observations of these locations. The data collected consists of observation notes, interview transcriptions, pictures, and forms. The researchers identified breakdowns related to security and privacy. Using Activity Theory to first structure, categorize, and analyze the observed breakdowns, I used phenomenological methods to understand the context and experience of security and privacy. The outcomes from this work are three themes, along with corresponding future scenarios. The themes discussed are security embodiment, communities of security, and zones of ambiguity. Those themes extend the literature in the areas of usable security, human-computer interaction, and trust. The presentation will use future scenarios to examine the complexity of developing secure systems for the real world. === Ph. D.
author2 Computer Science
author_facet Computer Science
Vega, Laurian
author Vega, Laurian
author_sort Vega, Laurian
title Security in Practice: Examining the Collaborative Management of Sensitive Information in Childcare Centers and Physicians' Offices
title_short Security in Practice: Examining the Collaborative Management of Sensitive Information in Childcare Centers and Physicians' Offices
title_full Security in Practice: Examining the Collaborative Management of Sensitive Information in Childcare Centers and Physicians' Offices
title_fullStr Security in Practice: Examining the Collaborative Management of Sensitive Information in Childcare Centers and Physicians' Offices
title_full_unstemmed Security in Practice: Examining the Collaborative Management of Sensitive Information in Childcare Centers and Physicians' Offices
title_sort security in practice: examining the collaborative management of sensitive information in childcare centers and physicians' offices
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/37552
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-04062011-145435/
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