Contact

University of Oldenburg Faculty II - Department of Computer Science Department Safety-Security-Interaction 26111 Oldenburg

Secretariat

Ingrid Ahlhorn

A03 2-208

+49 (0) 441 - 798 2426

Safety-Security-Interaction

Welcome to the Safety-Security-Interaction Group!

The Safety-Security-Interaction group is concerned with the development of theoretically sound technologies for maintaining the security of IT systems in the context of safety-critical systems and the Internet of Things. The main emphasis lies on developing security solutions tailored to the context-specific conditions in safety-critical systems, thereby giving special importance to studying the interaction between the security and the safety of the systems to be protected.

Job announcement

Ph.D. Position in IoT Security; Application deadline: 8 March 2026

News

Article at AMCIS 2025!

SSI-co-authored paper „An Organizational Field Experiment on Phishing and Cybersecurity Risk Homeostasis Theory” accepted at AMCIS 2025!

SSI-co-authored paper „An Organizational Field Experiment on Phishing and Cybersecurity Risk Homeostasis Theory” accepted at AMCIS 2025!

K. Hobbensiefken, B. Balk, A. Peter, und P. Staudt, "An Organizational Field Experiment on Phishing and Cybersecurity Risk Homeostasis Theory" in Proc. of the 31st Americas Conference on Information Systems (AMCIS 2025), 2025.

Short Summary:

Phishing remains a persistent cybersecurity threat, with attackers continuously refining their techniques to evade detection. This study applies Risk Homeostasis Theory (RHT) to understand employee behavior in response to phishing attacks within a large organization. Through a 2x2 between-subjects field experiment involving 400 employees, we assess the impact of cybersecurity training and phishing incident reports on phishing susceptibility. Our findings suggest that general cybersecurity training alone does not immediately reduce phishing risk, but phishing-specific training significantly improves employee susceptibility. Regular phishing incident reports initially enhance risk awareness and reduce susceptibility; however, this effect diminishes over time. Interestingly, combining training and reports does not yield significant improvements, raising questions about the effect of combined interventions. This study provides the first empirical insights into RHT’s application in cybersecurity and highlights the importance of targeted interventions to enhance organizational resilience against phishing threats.

(Changed: 05 Feb 2026)  Kurz-URL:Shortlink: https://uol.de/p81251n11957en
Zum Seitananfang scrollen Scroll to the top of the page

This page contains automatically translated content.