Security and Human Behavior (SHB) 2024

This week, I hosted the seventeenth Workshop on Security and Human Behavior at the Harvard Kennedy School. This is the first workshop since our co-founder, Ross Anderson, died unexpectedly.

SHB is a small, annual, invitational workshop of people studying various aspects of the human side of security. The fifty or so attendees include psychologists, economists, computer security researchers, criminologists, sociologists, political scientists, designers, lawyers, philosophers, anthropologists, geographers, neuroscientists, business school professors, and a smattering of others. It’s not just an interdisciplinary event; most of the people here are individually interdisciplinary.

Our goal is always to maximize discussion and interaction. We do that by putting everyone on panels, and limiting talks to six to eight minutes, with the rest of the time for open discussion. Short talks limit presenters’ ability to get into the boring details of their work, and the interdisciplinary audience discourages jargon.

Since the beginning, this workshop has been the most intellectually stimulating two days of my professional year. It influences my thinking in different and sometimes surprising ways—and has resulted in some new friendships and unexpected collaborations. This is why some of us have been coming back every year for over a decade.

This year’s schedule is here. This page lists the participants and includes links to some of their work. Kami Vaniea liveblogged both days.

Here are my posts on the first, second, third, fourth, fifth, sixth, seventh, eighth, ninth, tenth, eleventh, twelfth, thirteenth, fourteenth, fifteenth and sixteenth SHB workshops. Follow those links to find summaries, papers, and occasionally audio/video recordings of the sessions. Ross maintained a good webpage of psychology and security resources—it’s still up for now.

Next year we will be in Cambridge, UK, hosted by Frank Stajano.

EDITED TO ADD (6/21): Audio from the event.

Posted on June 7, 2024 at 4:55 PM7 Comments

Comments

44 52 4D CO+2 June 8, 2024 1:19 AM

Heat exhaustion or heat stroke: What to do in an emergency:

Ask your trusted local veterinarians about ice baths and rapid temperature changes

Anonymous June 8, 2024 10:11 AM

“Management is that for which there is no algorithm. Where there is an algorithm, it’s administration”. – R. NEEDHAM

Posting this here since I am not sure if humans are managed or administered.

Anonymous2 June 8, 2024 11:57 AM

@Anonymous
@ALL

“I am not sure if humans are managed or administered.”

Try herded like cats, cattle, or sheep.

Winter June 8, 2024 12:27 PM

@Anonymous, Anonymous2

Posting this here since I am not sure if humans are managed or administered.

Depends on where you work. Some work was historically managed using whips. Modern warehouse management at, eg, Amazon, reeks more like the plantation work of yore.

In such cases, herding might indeed be a better word that more covers the actual situation.

cls June 8, 2024 10:53 PM

Really enjoying this comment thread, with no echolalia and no chives. Could do without the spam, I’m vegetarian.

Anonymous June 9, 2024 4:05 PM

‘Spy mania’: Why is Russia accusing its own physicists of treason?
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c8001gvp4dpo

“Retired FSB General Alexander Mikhailov says the FSB “must ensure the confidentiality” of military technology.

He says “undoubtedly” that there must be “substantial grounds” for severe sentences such as the 14-year prison term handed down in May to one of the three ITAM scientists, Anatoly Maslov.

Gen Mikhailov says the current spike in treason cases is the product of the expansion of freedoms and democracy in the 1990s.

He says this led to a change in attitude from Soviet times, when he says those with access to state secrets were “thoroughly vetted” and “understood the responsibility” of disclosing them.

“Some people were talking too much and leaks appeared,” he adds.”

More interesting details in the article.

Looks like lessons taught by activity of e.g. Gordievskiy, Penkovskiy of passing state secrets to foreigner was learned. Just opinion.

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