Visible to the public Biblio

Filters: Author is Davies, Nigel  [Clear All Filters]
2020-01-02
Trotter, Ludwig, Prange, Sarah, Khamis, Mohamed, Davies, Nigel, Alt, Florian.  2018.  Design Considerations for Secure and Usable Authentication on Situated Displays. Proceedings of the 17th International Conference on Mobile and Ubiquitous Multimedia. :483–490.
Users often need to authenticate at situated displays in order to, for example, make purchases, access sensitive information, or confirm an identity. However, the exposure of interactions in public spaces introduces a large attack surface (e.g., observation, smudge or thermal attacks). A plethora of authentication models and input modalities that aim at disguising users' input has been presented in the past. However, a comprehensive analysis on the requirements for secure and usable authentication on public displays is still missing. This work presents 13 design considerations suitable to inform practitioners and researchers during the development process of authentication systems for situated displays in public spaces. It draws on a comprehensive analysis of prior literature and subsequent discussion with five experts in the fields of pervasive displays, human-computer-interaction and usable security.
2017-06-27
Davies, Nigel, Taft, Nina, Satyanarayanan, Mahadev, Clinch, Sarah, Amos, Brandon.  2016.  Privacy Mediators: Helping IoT Cross the Chasm. Proceedings of the 17th International Workshop on Mobile Computing Systems and Applications. :39–44.

Unease over data privacy will retard consumer acceptance of IoT deployments. The primary source of discomfort is a lack of user control over raw data that is streamed directly from sensors to the cloud. This is a direct consequence of the over-centralization of today's cloud-based IoT hub designs. We propose a solution that interposes a locally-controlled software component called a privacy mediator on every raw sensor stream. Each mediator is in the same administrative domain as the sensors whose data is being collected, and dynamically enforces the current privacy policies of the owners of the sensors or mobile users within the domain. This solution necessitates a logical point of presence for mediators within the administrative boundaries of each organization. Such points of presence are provided by cloudlets, which are small locally-administered data centers at the edge of the Internet that can support code mobility. The use of cloudlet-based mediators aligns well with natural personal and organizational boundaries of trust and responsibility.