School of Phish: A Real-World Evaluation of Anti-Phishing Training
journal contribution
posted on 2009-01-01, 00:00authored byPonnurangam Kumaraguru, Justin Cranshaw, Alessandro Acquisti, Lorrie CranorLorrie Cranor, Jason Hong, Mary Ann Blair, Theodore Pham
PhishGuru is an embedded training system that teaches
users to avoid falling for phishing attacks by delivering a
training message when the user clicks on the URL in a simulated
phishing email. In previous lab and real-world experiments,
we validated the effectiveness of this approach.
Here, we extend our previous work with a 515-participant,
real-world study in which we focus on long-term retention
and the effect of two training messages. We also investigate
demographic factors that influence training and general
phishing susceptibility. Results of this study show that (1)
users trained with PhishGuru retain knowledge even after
28 days; (2) adding a second training message to reinforce
the original training decreases the likelihood of people giving
information to phishing websites; and (3) training does
not decrease users’ willingness to click on links in legitimate
messages. We found no significant difference between males
and females in the tendency to fall for phishing emails both
before and after the training. We found that participants
in the 18-25 age group were consistently more vulnerable to
phishing attacks on all days of the study than older participants.
Finally, our exit survey results indicate that most
participants enjoyed receiving training during their normal
use of email.