Title
Rootkits And What We Know: Assessing Us And Korean Knowledge And Perceptions
Abstract
Respondents from eight Korean and US higher education institutions were surveyed as to their knowledge and experience with various forms of computer malware. The surveys provide insight into knowledge of rootkits that have become coffee lounge discussion following the once secretive Sony rootkit news break in late 2005 and then the rash of accusations and acknowledgments of other rootkits that followed. The surveys provide an empirical assessment of perceptions between students in the two countries with regard to various forms of malware. The two groups are similar in many respects, but they exhibit significant differences in self-reported perceptions of rootkit familiarity. US respondents report higher levels of familiarity for all assessed malware types, including the fictional "Trilobyte" virus. A timeline-based comparison between virus and rootkit knowledge reveals that relatively little is known about rootkits today. This highlights dangers related to existing knowledge levels but presents hope for solutions and an accelerated rootkit awareness curve to improve worldwide malware protection.
Year
DOI
Venue
2007
10.4018/jisp.2007100105
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF INFORMATION SECURITY AND PRIVACY
Keywords
Field
DocType
cross-culture, malware, spyware, rootkit, virus
Internet privacy,Cross culture,Empirical assessment,Computer security,Computer science,Rootkit,Timeline,Malware,Perception,Higher education
Journal
Volume
Issue
ISSN
1
4
1930-1650
Citations 
PageRank 
References 
0
0.34
5
Authors
5
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Kirk P. Arnett158854.77
Mark B. Schmidt29514.20
Allen C. Johnston364727.19
Jongki Kim422.05
Ha Jin Hwang512.37