Search: Home Bugtraq Vulnerabilities Mailing Lists Jobs Tools Vista
Browsers, phishing, and user interface design
Scott Granneman, 2006-06-05

Phishing works for so many reasons, we need to rethink browser and user interface design to provide some real-life security to the average user who doesn't see or understand the security cues.

Comments Mode:
Sure. Lots of ideas... 2006-06-05
Anonymous (2 replies)
Your First Statement Is Right 2006-06-06
Anonymous (1 replies)
Re: Your First Statement Is Right 2006-06-07
Anonymous (1 replies)
Re: Sure. Lots of ideas... 2006-06-24
Anonymous
Send them to AOL 2006-06-07
Anonymous
Stop babying people 2006-06-09
Anonymous
Wrong end to start patching 2006-06-12
Thomas Nilsen (1 replies)
Re: Wrong end to start patching 2006-06-12
Anonymous
Ingredients of possible solutions 2006-06-16
S. Lo Presti
Users ignore alert messages... 2006-06-20
Anonymous
...because they try to explain, in a single popup with a nice "OK" button in the middle, what the whole story behind that alert is all about.

Consider this: the user is just trying to browse a site and the browser comes up saying "wait a moment: I have to tell you a long but interesting story".

Sure the user is going to answer "Ok, ok, but now let me just see this nice site my friend told me about".

Maybe alert messages could be more effective in... well, alerting the user if they were short and simple, like "Caution: malicious site. For more info click _here_" (a link to the whole story for those - not many, it seems - who'd like to understand what's going on).

But I guess this would feel too much like IE's alerts, which are ineffective as well...

[ reply ]

Link to this comment: http://www.securityfocus.com/comments/columns/405/33743#33743
simple: 2006-06-24
ailaG







 

Privacy Statement
Copyright 2008, SecurityFocus