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Security goes to ground: on the applicability of security entrepreneurship to grassroot activism.

Faily, Shamal

Authors

Shamal Faily



Abstract

Designing security for grassroot movements raises several challenges not particular to the organisations that are catered to by conventional approaches to security design. Drawing on analogies between Social Entrepreneurship and Grassroot Activism, adopting an entrepreneurial approach to security design may lead to security design decisions which are both in-tune with a grassroot movement's aims and cost effective. This position paper considers the applicability of Security Entrepreneurship for security design in grassroot movements. Using a SWOT analysis, we discuss the strengths and weaknesses or this approach, before considering external threats and opportunities arising its prolonged adoption.

Citation

FAILY, S. 2011. Security goes to ground: on the applicability of security entrepreneurship to grassroot activism. Presented at the Workshop on HCI, politics and the city, part of the 29th Annual CHI conference on human factors in computing systems (CHI 2011), 7-8 May 2011, Vancouver, Canada.

Presentation Conference Type Conference Paper (unpublished)
Conference Name Workshop on HCI, politics and the city, part of the 29th Annual CHI conference on human factors in computing systems (CHI 2011)
Conference Location Vancouver, Canada
Start Date May 7, 2011
End Date May 8, 2011
Deposit Date Dec 10, 2021
Publicly Available Date Dec 10, 2021
Keywords Systems security; Security risk analysis; User-centred design; Entrepreneurship; Activism; Grassroots organisations
Public URL https://rgu-repository.worktribe.com/output/1446685

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