Cybersecurity and Human Behavior

The field of cybersecurity is shifting towards a more nuanced understanding of human behavior and its impact on digital systems. Researchers are exploring new methods to study how individuals interact with technology, including the use of network traffic analysis and ethnographic approaches. A key area of focus is the interplay between cyber, physical, and social systems, and how vulnerabilities in one domain can have far-reaching consequences. The role of human cognition, social infrastructure, and decision-making is being recognized as crucial in shaping responses to cyber threats and climate-related risks. Noteworthy papers in this area include: Network Traffic as a Scalable Ethnographic Lens for Understanding University Students' AI Tool Practices, which introduces a novel approach to studying AI tool usage. Cyber Slavery Infrastructures: A Socio-Technical Study of Forced Criminality in Transnational Cybercrime, which sheds light on the disturbing phenomenon of cyber slavery. From misinformation to climate crisis: Navigating vulnerabilities in the cyber-physical-social systems, which examines the critical role of human vulnerabilities in the cyber-physical-social-climate nexus.

Sources

Network Traffic as a Scalable Ethnographic Lens for Understanding University Students' AI Tool Practices

Cyber Slavery Infrastructures: A Socio-Technical Study of Forced Criminality in Transnational Cybercrime

From misinformation to climate crisis: Navigating vulnerabilities in the cyber-physical-social systems

Searching for a Farang: Collective Security among Women in Pattaya, Thailand

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