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Enhancing Personalised Cybersecurity Guidance for Older Adults in Ireland

Ashley Sheil, Jacob Camilleri, Moya Cronin, Melanie Gruben, Michelle O Keefe, Hazel Murray, Sanchari Das

TL;DR

The findings show that, despite being highly aware of cyber-scams, older adults remain very concerned about them and valued advice on privacy and tools that can help them feel more in control online.

Abstract

The term `Digital Divide' emerged in the mid-1990s, highlighting the gap between those with access to emerging information technologies and those without. This gap persists for older adults even in the 21st century. To address this, our study focused on how older adults in Ireland can feel safer online. We conducted a two-phase study. In Phase I, 58 participants used Dot Voting to identify top cyber-security priorities, including password management, privacy, and avoiding scams. This informed Phase II, where we held focus groups with 31 participants from rural and urban communities in Ireland. Researchers provided tailored advice through presentations and leaflets, followed by open discussions. Our findings show that, despite being highly aware of cyber-scams, older adults remain very concerned about them. Participants expressed hesitation about using online password managers and two-factor authentication but valued advice on privacy and tools that can help them feel more in control online.

Enhancing Personalised Cybersecurity Guidance for Older Adults in Ireland

TL;DR

The findings show that, despite being highly aware of cyber-scams, older adults remain very concerned about them and valued advice on privacy and tools that can help them feel more in control online.

Abstract

The term `Digital Divide' emerged in the mid-1990s, highlighting the gap between those with access to emerging information technologies and those without. This gap persists for older adults even in the 21st century. To address this, our study focused on how older adults in Ireland can feel safer online. We conducted a two-phase study. In Phase I, 58 participants used Dot Voting to identify top cyber-security priorities, including password management, privacy, and avoiding scams. This informed Phase II, where we held focus groups with 31 participants from rural and urban communities in Ireland. Researchers provided tailored advice through presentations and leaflets, followed by open discussions. Our findings show that, despite being highly aware of cyber-scams, older adults remain very concerned about them. Participants expressed hesitation about using online password managers and two-factor authentication but valued advice on privacy and tools that can help them feel more in control online.

Paper Structure

This paper contains 12 sections, 2 tables.