Pop-up warnings ineffective?

2008-10-01

Helen Martin

Virus Bulletin, UK
Editor: Helen Martin

Abstract

Study shows users concentrate on getting rid of pop-up boxes as soon as possible rather than reading their contents.


A study in the US has suggested that computer users may largely ignore the pop-up windows that are used by some systems (such as Vista) to warn of unsafe computing use.

In the study, conducted by the Department of Psychology at North Carolina State University, 42 students were asked to rate a number of medical web pages for clutter – a cover story for the real purpose of the experiment which was to observe how they responded to pop-ups. Each student was presented with four pop-up windows which varied from warnings of programs executing or terminating to a flashing pop-up that added a browser status bar.

More than half of the students simply clicked ‘OK’ on the pop-up boxes almost automatically. The fact that their reaction times barely varied for the different types of box indicated that they were not bothering to read the contents. More than 40% said they just wanted to get rid of the box as quickly as possible.

While this was not a statistically significant study, it does raise questions as to the effectiveness of legitimate warning messages as well as highlighting once again a lack of awareness among users who seem happy to click on almost anything without a second thought.

twitter.png
fb.png
linkedin.png
hackernews.png
reddit.png

 

Latest articles:

Nexus Android banking botnet – compromising C&C panels and dissecting mobile AppInjects

Aditya Sood & Rohit Bansal provide details of a security vulnerability in the Nexus Android botnet C&C panel that was exploited to compromise the C&C panel in order to gather threat intelligence, and present a model of mobile AppInjects.

Cryptojacking on the fly: TeamTNT using NVIDIA drivers to mine cryptocurrency

TeamTNT is known for attacking insecure and vulnerable Kubernetes deployments in order to infiltrate organizations’ dedicated environments and transform them into attack launchpads. In this article Aditya Sood presents a new module introduced by…

Collector-stealer: a Russian origin credential and information extractor

Collector-stealer, a piece of malware of Russian origin, is heavily used on the Internet to exfiltrate sensitive data from end-user systems and store it in its C&C panels. In this article, researchers Aditya K Sood and Rohit Chaturvedi present a 360…

Fighting Fire with Fire

In 1989, Joe Wells encountered his first virus: Jerusalem. He disassembled the virus, and from that moment onward, was intrigued by the properties of these small pieces of self-replicating code. Joe Wells was an expert on computer viruses, was partly…

Run your malicious VBA macros anywhere!

Kurt Natvig wanted to understand whether it’s possible to recompile VBA macros to another language, which could then easily be ‘run’ on any gateway, thus revealing a sample’s true nature in a safe manner. In this article he explains how he recompiled…


Bulletin Archive

We have placed cookies on your device in order to improve the functionality of this site, as outlined in our cookies policy. However, you may delete and block all cookies from this site and your use of the site will be unaffected. By continuing to browse this site, you are agreeing to Virus Bulletin's use of data as outlined in our privacy policy.