Project participant
Qian Tang presented at ICIS 2012 in Orlando, FL, 14 December 2012,
a paper about comparisons of eight countries, in pairs,
one of each pair ranked on
and the other not.
Statistical results indicate the rankings changed organizational
spamming behavior.
Qian Tang, Leigh Linden, John S. Quarterman, and Andrew Whinston,
Reputation as Public Policy for Internet Security:
A Field Quasi-Experiment,
Abstract: Cybersecurity is a national priority in this big data era. Because of the lack of incentives and the existence of negative externality, companies often underinvest in addressing security risks and accidents, despite government and industry recommendations. In the present article, we propose a method that utilizes reputation through information disclosure to motivate companies to behave pro-socially, improving their Internet security. Using outbound spam as a proxy for Internet security, we conducted a quasi-experimental field study for eight countries through SpamRankings.net. This outgoing-spam-based study shows that information disclosure on outgoing spam can help reduce outgoing spam, approximately by 16 percent. This finding suggests that information disclosure can be leveraged to encourage companies to reduce security threats. It also provides support for public policies that require mandatory reporting from organizations and offers implications for evaluating and executing such policies.
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