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Students’ Perceived Ethical Severity of e-Learning Security Attacks. By: Yair Levy, Ph.D. Nova Southeastern University Graduate School of Computer and Information Sciences and Michelle M. Ramim , Ph.D. Nova Southeastern University Huizenga School of Business and Entrepreneurship.
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Students’ Perceived Ethical Severity of e-Learning Security Attacks By: YairLevy, Ph.D.Nova Southeastern UniversityGraduate School of Computer and Information Sciences and Michelle M. Ramim, Ph.D. Nova Southeastern University Huizenga School of Business and Entrepreneurship
Outline • Introduction • Objective • Theoretical background • Methodology and sample • Results • Conclusions
Introduction • Growing use e-learning beyond higher education • Career technical education • Medical education • Corporate and military training • K–12 education • 96% of 2-year and 4-year public higher education institutions provide some form of e-learning courses (U.S. Department of education, 2009) • Challenge- provide a secured and accountable e-learning environment • Valid authentication of users is a perpetual challenge amongst organizations
Introduction (Cont.) • Strategic efforts to reduce cyber-security treats(Obama calls for cyber czar, 2009) • A surge in incidents of unethical behavior reported in the U.S. news media (Cyberspace threats and Vulnerabilities, US Cert-gov) • Cyber-security incidents have climbed sharply, particularly after 9/11/2001 • NIMDA warm, Code Red • Only small percentage of such sophisticated attacks are reported to the public
Introduction (Cont.) • A need for a strategy to increase awareness and reduce cyber-security treats (EDUCAUSE) • Majority hackers were found to be below the age of 30 (Harris, 2004) • Nowadays, students are more technology savvy and may explore unethical actions under stress, including cyber attacks
Objectives • Investigate users’ perceptions about unethical behaviors, specifically e-learning security attacks • Some evidence from literature indicating that gender, age, and academic rank may have implications on ethical severity (Cronan et al., 2006; Ramim, 2007)
Theoretical Background • Ethical behavior is gender dependent (Cronan et al., 2006; Dorantes, Hewitt, & Goles, 2006; Kreie & Cronan, 1998) • Males appear to be less ethically driven • Females appear to be more ethically driven • Age and academic rank were also found to show differences related to perceptions about ethical behaviors (Kreie & Cronan, 1998) • Very little research has been done about such differences in the context of e-learning cyber-security attacks
Focus • Investigate students’ perceptions about the severity level of key e-learning security attacks • Create awareness about e-learning security • If students perceive the severity of key e-learning security attacks (eLSAs) to be low, then they might be more likely to engage or seek help in engaging on their behalf in such unethical behavior
Methodology and Sample • Five key security attacks were investigated: • Attack to the server • Intercepting e-mails (reading, altering, blocking, and/or deleting e-mails sent to someone else) • Unauthorized file sharing • Unauthorized access • Spoofing attack (impersonating as someone else to falsify data)
Methodology and Sample (Cont.) Table 1: The five e-learning security attacks The scale:
Methodology and Sample (Cont.) • 1,100 students attending online courses, both at the undergraduate and graduate level during Fall 2006 to Fall 2009 • 519 responses, represents about 47% response rate
Methodology and Sample (Cont.) Table 2. Descriptive Statistics of Study Participants (N=519)
Four Research Questions RQ1: How severe do students perceive e-learning security attacks? RQ2: Are there significant differences between males and females on their perceived ethical severity of e-learning security attacks? RQ3: Are there significant differences between undergraduate and graduate students on their perceived ethical severity of e-learning security attacks? RQ4: Are there significant differences between students’ age groups on their perceived ethical severity of e-learning security attacks?
Results • Majority of the students appears to self-report their perceptions as ethically driven across all five e-learning security attacks • The overall percentage of students reported, either ‘4’ (unethical) and ‘5’ (very unethical) when asked to rate their ethical severity about the five e-learning security attacks, was very high (90% on average) with: • Highest: (eLSA2) Intercepting e-mails @ 95% • Lowest: (eLSA3) Unauthorized file sharing @ 85%
Results (Cont.) • Majority of the students appear to understand the ethical severity of these e-learning security attacks • A small percentage (3.3% on average), reported either ‘1’ (ethical) and ‘2’ (somewhat ethical) when asked to rate their ethical severity about the five e-learning security attacks • Highest: (eLSA3) Unauthorized file sharing @ ~6% • Lowest: (eLSA2) Intercepting e-mails @ ~2%
Results (Cont.) • Significant (p<0.005) gender differences exist only for eLSA3 Unauthorized file sharing • Overall across all five items (eLSA1- eLSA5), the results indicated that in regards to perceived ethical severity of e-learning security attacks males find these attacks less severe than females
Results (Cont.) • Significant (p<0.001) age level differences exist only for eLSA1 (Initiating a cyber-attack on the e-learning server) • Overall across all five items (eLSA1- eLSA5), the results indicated that graduate students appear to report these e-learning security attacks slightly higher (more severe) than undergraduate students
Results (Cont.) • Significant age level differences for all items with eLSA1, eLSA3, eLSA5 (p<0.001), eLSA2 (p<0.01), and eLSA5 (p=0.01) • Overall across all five items (eLSA1- eLSA5), the results indicated in regards to perceived ethical severity of e-learning security attacks, there is an increase trend where the older the student is, the more severe s/he ranks the attacks
Conclusions • A sample of 519 students attending e-learning courses in the U.S. • Majority (~90%) of the students appear to self-report their perceptions as ethically driven across all the five e-learning security attacks • It appears that the majority of the students do understand the ethical severity of these e-learning security attacks
Conclusions (Cont.) • Small percentage (3.3%) of the students reported specific security attacks to be ethical • file sharing scored the highest (~6%) • In general, males find security attacks less severe than females • It appears that males are more risk takers • Females tend to be risk averse than males • Undergraduate students appear to perceive attacks only slightly less severe than graduate students
Conclusions (Cont.) • The older the student is, the more severe s/he ranks the attacks – i.e. more ethical • Young male students, appear to find the e-learning security attacks significantly less ethically severe or not severe at all • Younger students entering technical educational programs also learn how to conduct some of these exact security attacks – need for additional research!
Thank you! • Questions/comments? • Thank you all for attending!
Contact Information - Michelle Michelle M. Ramim, Ph.D. Part-time ProfessorNova Southeastern University Huizenga School of Business and Entrepreneurship The DeSantis Building 3301 College Avenue Ft. Lauderdale, FL 33314 E-mail: ramim@nova.edu Site: http://www.nova.edu/~ramim/
Contact Information - Yair Yair Levy, Ph.D.Associate ProfessorNova Southeastern UniversityGraduate School of Computer and Information SciencesThe DeSantis Building - Room 40583301 College AvenueFort Lauderdale, FL 33314Tel.: 954-262-2006 Fax: 954-262-3915E-mail: levyy@nova.edu Site: http://scis.nova.edu/~levyy/