2020
Will You Trust This TLS Certificate? Perceptions of People Working in IT (Extended Version)
UKROP, Martin, Lydia KRAUS a Václav MATYÁŠZákladní údaje
Originální název
Will You Trust This TLS Certificate? Perceptions of People Working in IT (Extended Version)
Autoři
UKROP, Martin (703 Slovensko, garant, domácí), Lydia KRAUS (276 Německo, domácí) a Václav MATYÁŠ (203 Česká republika, domácí)
Vydání
Digital Threats: Research and Practice, New York, NY, USA, Association for Computing Machinery, 2020, 2692-1626
Další údaje
Jazyk
angličtina
Typ výsledku
Článek v odborném periodiku
Obor
10201 Computer sciences, information science, bioinformatics
Stát vydavatele
Spojené státy
Utajení
není předmětem státního či obchodního tajemství
Odkazy
Kód RIV
RIV/00216224:14330/20:00116278
Organizační jednotka
Fakulta informatiky
Klíčová slova anglicky
warning design;documentation;TLS certificate;usable security
Štítky
Příznaky
Mezinárodní význam, Recenzováno
Změněno: 9. 6. 2022 14:57, RNDr. Pavel Šmerk, Ph.D.
Anotace
V originále
Flawed TLS certificates are not uncommon on the Internet. While they signal a potential issue, in most cases they have benign causes (e.g., misconfiguration or even deliberate deployment). This adds fuzziness to the decision on whether to trust a connection or not. Little is known about perceptions of flawed certificates by IT professionals, even though their decisions impact high numbers of end users. Moreover, it is unclear how much the content of error messages and documentation influences these perceptions. To shed light on these issues, we observed 75 attendees of an industrial IT conference investigating different certificate validation errors. We also analyzed the influence of reworded error messages and redesigned documentation. We find that people working in IT have very nuanced opinions, with trust decisions being far from binary. The self-signed and the name-constrained certificates seem to be over-trusted (the latter also being poorly understood). We show that even small changes in existing error messages can positively influence resource use, comprehension, and trust assessment. At the end of the article, we summarize lessons learned from conducting usable security studies with IT professionals.