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economics
This page is under construction. We will shortly be looking
at writing about the extent of online crime and the cost
of security in cyberspace. The page will also highlight
statistics about the prevalence and impact of particular
online offences.
In the interim, for points of entry into the literature
about the economics of security see
- Ross
Anderson's 2001 Why Information Security is Hard:
An Economic Perspective (PDF)
- his site
has more detailed pointers
- the
2002 Berkeley Workshop on Economics & Information
Security (here)
- Lawrence
Gordon & Martin Loeb's 'The Economics of Information
Security Investment' in Economics of Information
Security (Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic 2004) edited
by L Jean Camp & Stephen Lewis
- Kenneth
Soo's 99 page thesis (PDF)
on How Much is Enough: A Risk-Management Approach
to Computer Security
- Robert
Hahn & Anne Layne-Farrar's 2006 The Law and
Economics of Software Security (PDF)
- a
field study on the cost to the US economy of information
infrastructure failures (PDF)
- Economic
barriers to adopting new security protocols (PDF)
- Jason
Franklin, Vern Paxson, Adrian Perrig & Stefan Savage's
2007 An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the
Wealth of Internet Miscreants (PDF)
- the
Australian Standard (AS 4360) Risk Management portal
Some
pointers to literature on data loss are here.
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