An Exploratory Literature Review of Efforts Towards Improving Cybersecurity

Description
Data breaches and software vulnerabilities are increasingly severe problems that incur both monetary and reputational costs for companies as well as societal impacts. While companies have clear monetary and legal incentives to mitigate risk of data breaches, companies have significantly

Data breaches and software vulnerabilities are increasingly severe problems that incur both monetary and reputational costs for companies as well as societal impacts. While companies have clear monetary and legal incentives to mitigate risk of data breaches, companies have significantly less incentive to mitigate software product vulnerabilities, and their existing incentive is widely considered insufficient. In this thesis, I initially set out to perform a statistical analysis correlating company characteristics and behavior with the characteristics of the data breaches they suffer, as well as performing a metaanalysis of existing literature. While the attempted statistical analysis was hindered by lack of sufficiently comprehensive free company datasets, I have recorded my efforts in finding suitable databases. I have also performed an exploratory literature review of 15 papers in the field of improving cybersecurity, and identified four blockers to security addressed and three elements of solutions proposed by the papers, as well as derived insights from the distribution of these blockers and elements of solutions in the papers reviewed.

Downloads

One or more components are restricted to ASU affiliates. Please sign in to view the rest.
Restrictions Statement

Barrett Honors College theses and creative projects are restricted to ASU community members.

Details

Contributors
Date Created
2022-05
Resource Type
Additional Information
English
Series
  • Academic Year 2021-2022
Open Access
Peer-reviewed