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Investigating personal determinants of phishing and the effect of national culture

Waldo Rocha Flores (Department of Industrial Information and Control Systems, Royal Institute of Technology, Stockholm, Sweden)
Hannes Holm (Swedish Defense Research Agency (FOI); Linköping; Sweden)
Marcus Nohlberg (School of Informatics; University of Skövde; Skövde; Sweden)
Mathias Ekstedt (Department of Industrial Information and Control Systems, Royal Institute of Technology, Stockholm, Sweden)

Information and Computer Security

ISSN: 2056-4961

Article publication date: 8 June 2015

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Abstract

Purpose

The purpose of the study was twofold: to investigate the correlation between a sample of personal psychological and demographic factors and resistance to phishing; and to investigate if national culture moderates the strength of these correlations.

Design/methodology/approach

To measure potential determinants, a survey was distributed to 2,099 employees of nine organizations in Sweden, USA and India. Then, the authors conducted unannounced phishing exercises, in which a phishing attack targeted the same sample.

Findings

Intention to resist social engineering, general information security awareness, formal IS training and computer experience were identified to have a positive significant correlation to phishing resilience. Furthermore, the results showed that the correlation between phishing determinants and employees’ observed that phishing behavior differs between Swedish, US and Indian employees in 6 out of 15 cases.

Research limitations/implications

The identified determinants had, even though not strong, a significant positive correlation. This suggests that more work needs to be done to more fully understand determinants of phishing. The study assumes that culture effects apply to all individuals in a nation. However, differences based on cultures might exist based on firm characteristics within a country. The Swedish sample is dominating, while only 40 responses from Indian employees were collected. This unequal size of samples suggests that conclusions based on the results from the cultural analysis should be drawn cautiously. A natural continuation of the research is therefore to further explore the generalizability of the findings by collecting data from other nations with similar cultures as Sweden, USA and India.

Originality/value

Using direct observations of employees’ security behaviors has rarely been used in previous research. Furthermore, analyzing potential differences in theoretical models based on national culture is an understudied topic in the behavioral information security field. This paper addresses both these issues.

Keywords

Citation

Rocha Flores, W., Holm, H., Nohlberg, M. and Ekstedt, M. (2015), "Investigating personal determinants of phishing and the effect of national culture", Information and Computer Security, Vol. 23 No. 2, pp. 178-199. https://doi.org/10.1108/ICS-05-2014-0029

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2015, Emerald Group Publishing Limited

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