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Study looks at who gets phished and why

A study by Arun Vishwanath and colleagues points out why we’re susceptible to phishing scams and how to be avoid being snared. Photo: DOUGLAS LEVERE

  • “By way of prevention, we found that spam blockers are imperative to reduce the number of unnecessary emails individuals receive that could potentially clutter their information processing and judgment.”

    Arun Vishwanath
    Associate Professor of Communication
By PATRICIA DONOVAN
Published: April 11, 2011

Communication researchers at four major universities have found that if you receive a lot of email, habitually respond to a good portion of it, maintain a lot of online relationships and conduct a large number of transactions online you are more susceptible to email “phishing” expeditions than those who limit their online activity.

The study, “Why Do People Get Phished?” forthcoming in the journal Decision Support Systems and Electronic Commerce, uses an integrated information processing model to test individual differences in vulnerability to phishing.

The study is particularly pertinent given the rash of phishing expeditions that have become public of late, the most recent involving the online marketing firm Epsilon, whose database was breached last week by hackers, potentially affecting millions of banking and retail customers.

The authors are Arun “Vish” Vishwanath, UB associate professor of communication and adjunct associate professor of management science and systems, and H. Raghav Rao, UB professor of management science and systems, and Tejaswini Herath, Brock University, Ontario; Rui Chen, Ball State University; and Jingguo Wang, University of Texas, Arlington. Herath, Chen and Wang all hold a PhD in management science and systems from UB.

Email phishing is a process that employs such techniques as using the names of credible businesses (American Express, eBay), government institutions (Internal Revenue Service, Department of Motor Vehicles) or current events (political donations, Beijing Olympic tickets, aiding Katrina victims) in conjunction with statements invoking fear, threat, excitement or urgency to persuade people to respond with personal and sensitive information like usernames, passwords and credit card details.

Phishing exploits what are generally accepted to be the poor current Web security technologies, but Vishwanath says that “By way of prevention, we found that spam blockers are imperative to reduce the number of unnecessary emails individuals receive that could potentially clutter their information processing and judgment.

“At the other end,” he says, “individuals need to be extra careful when utilizing a single email account to respond to all their emails. An effective strategy is to use different email accounts for different purposes. If one email address is used solely for banking and another is used solely for personal communication with family and friends, it will increase your attention to the details of the email and reduce the likelihood of chance deception because of clutter.”

Vishwanath also advocates setting aside time to focus and respond to personal emails separately from work-related emails. For instance, setting aside a time each day for responding to personal banking emails gives you time to process them more clearly and consider their legitimacy before responding.

The integrated information-processing model of phishing susceptibility presented in the UB study is grounded in prior research in information processing and interpersonal deception.

“We refined and validated our model using a sample of intended victims of an actual phishing attack,” Vishwanath says, noting that overall, the model explains close to 50 percent of the variance in individual phishing susceptibility.

“Our results indicate that people process most phishing emails peripherally and make decisions based on simple cues embedded in the email. Interestingly, urgency cues, such as threats and warnings in the email, stimulated increased information processing, thereby short-circuiting the resources available for attending to other cues that could potentially help detect the deception.

“In addition, our findings suggest that habitual patterns of media use, combined with high levels of email load, have a strong and significant influence on individuals’ likelihood to be phished.”

The study also found that a person’s competency with computing did not protect them from phishing scams, but their awareness about phishing, in conjunction with healthy email habits, helped them avoid online deception.