Economics and Security Resource Page

Ross Anderson


Do we spend enough on keeping `hackers' out of our computer systems? Do we not spend enough? Or do we spend too much? For that matter, do we spend too little on the police and the army, or too much? And do we spend our security budgets on the right things?

The economics of security is a hot and rapidly growing field of research. More and more people are coming to realise that security failures are often due to perverse incentives rather than to the lack of suitable technical protection mechanisms. (Indeed, the former often explain the latter.) While much recent research has been on `cyberspace' security issues - from hacking through fraud to copyright policy - it is expanding to throw light on `everyday' security issues at one end, and to provide new insights and new problems for `normal' computer scientists and economists at the other. In the commercial world, as in the world of diplomacy, there can be complex linkages between security arguments and economic ends.

This page provides links to a number of key papers, conferences, the home pages of active researchers, relevant books, and other resources. Complementary pages include Alessandro Acquisti's privacy economics page, Jean Camp's bibliography and Larry Gordon's pages on cybersecurity risk management.

Our annual event is the Workshop on Economics and Information Security: the 2007 event will be at Carnegie-Mellon University from 7-8 June. The 2006 workshop was held in Cambridge, England; WEIS 2005 at Harvard; WEIS 2004 at Minnesota; WEIS 2003 at the University of Maryland and WEIS 2002 at Berkeley. All the papers from past conferences are available online, and a book, Economics of Information Security, has a selection of papers from WEIS 2002 and WEIS 2003. Events with some related subject-matter include the Conference on the Economics of the Software and Internet Industries at Toulouse, the Workshop on Internet and Network Economics in Greece, and the forthcoming Workshop on the Economics of Securing the Information Infrastructure in Virginia.

Introductory Papers

Economics of Privacy

See also Alessandro Acquisti's privacy economics page.

The Information Security Business

Economics of vulnerabilities

Relevant Theory Papers

Interactions of Security with Copyright and Digital Rights Management

Information Security Regulation

Miscellaneous Papers

Conferences

The event to aim for if you want to keep up with research in this field and get to know people is WEIS - the Workshop on the Economics of Information Security.

These links give you access to all the conference papers. WEIS 2007 will be held on June 7-8 at Carnegie-Mellon University.

Other relevant conferences include:

Community - Home Pages of People Interested in Security Economics

Books

Other Resources

Here are some suggestions for further reading: