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'''HCISec''' is the study of interaction between humans and computers, or [[HCI]], specifically as it pertains to [[information security]]. Its aim, in plain terms, is to improve the [[usability]] of security features in [[end user]] applications.
Unlike [[HCI]], which has roots in the early days of [[Xerox PARC]] during the [[1970s]], HCISec is a nascent field of study by comparison. Not surprisingly, interest in this topic tracks with that of [[Internet security]], which has become an area of broad public concern only in very recent years.
Historically, security features exhibit poor usability for reasons that include:
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* they were added in casual afterthought
* they were hastily patched in to address newly discovered [[security bug]]s
* they address very complex [[use case]]s without the benefit of a [[Wizard
* their interface designers lacked understanding of related security concepts
* their interface designers were not usability experts (often meaning they were the application developers themselves)
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*[http://www.simson.net/thesis/ "Design Principles and Patterns for Computer Systems That Are Simultaneously Secure and Usable"], by [[Simson Garfinkel]]
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*[[Human-computer interaction]]
*[[Information security]]
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*[http://gaudior.net/alma/biblio.html HCISec Bibliography]
*[http://tech.groups.yahoo.com/group/hcisec/ HCISec] [[Yahoo
*[http://www.usablesecurity.com Usable Security Blog]
[[Category:Computer security]]▼
[[Category:Human communication]]
[[Category:Human-computer interaction| ]]
▲[[Category:Computer security| ]]
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