[Extended] Ethics in Computer Security Research: A Data-Driven Assessment of the Past, the Present, and the Possible Future
By: Harshini Sri Ramulu , Helen Schmitt , Bogdan Rerich and more
Potential Business Impact:
Helps computer security researchers make better ethical choices.
Ethical questions are discussed regularly in computer security. Still, researchers in computer security lack clear guidance on how to make, document, and assess ethical decisions in research when what is morally right or acceptable is not clear-cut. In this work, we give an overview of the discussion of ethical implications in current published work in computer security by reviewing all 1154 top-tier security papers published in 2024, finding inconsistent levels of ethics reporting with a strong focus of reporting institutional or ethics board approval, human subjects protection, and responsible disclosure, and a lack of discussion of balancing harms and benefits. We further report on the results of a semi-structured interview study with 24 computer security and privacy researchers (among whom were also: reviewers, ethics committee members, and/or program chairs) and their ethical decision-making both as authors and during peer review, finding a strong desire for ethical research, but a lack of consistency in considered values, ethical frameworks (if articulated), decision-making, and outcomes. We present an overview of the current state of the discussion of ethics and current de-facto standards in computer security research, and contribute suggestions to improve the state of ethics in computer security research.
Similar Papers
Ethical conundrums: Hacked data in the study of far-right violent extremism
Computers and Society
Researchers can ethically use hacked data for studies.
What Does Information Science Offer for Data Science Research?: A Review of Data and Information Ethics Literature
Digital Libraries
Fixes unfairness in computer data.
The history of digital ethics
Computers and Society
Explains how computer rules changed as life went digital.