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Editors contains: "Schmorrow, D"

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  1. Schmorrow, D; Fidopiastis, C (Ed.)
  2. Schmorrow, D.; Fidopiastis, C. (Ed.)
    As security measures to protect against cyberattacks increase, hackers have begun to target the weakest link in the cybersecurity chain–people. Such attacks are categorized as Social Engineering and rely on the manipulation and deception of people rather than technical security flaws [4]. This study attempts to examine the relationship between people and their vulnerability to Social Engineering attacks by posing the following questions: (1) what relationship, if any, exists between personality traits and Social Engineering vulnerability, and (2) what relationship, if any, exists between personality traits and the speed at which an individual makes cybersecurity-related decisions. To answer these questions, 79 undergraduate students at the University of Hawaii were surveyed to measure their personality traits and cybersecurity awareness. The survey results indicated that there was no significant correlation between the measured personality traits and measured vulnerability. The relationship between different personality traits and the elapsed time to complete the survey was slightly more significant; how-ever, it was still statistically insignificant overall. 
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