Litcius/Paper detail

Listen to Developers! A Participatory Design Study on Security Warnings for Cryptographic APIs

Peter Leo Gorski, Yasemin Acar, Luigi Lo Iacono, Sascha Fahl

202039 citationsDOI

Abstract

The positive effect of security information communicated to developers through API warnings has been established. However, current prototypical designs are based on security warnings for end-users. To improve security feedback for developers, we conducted a participatory design study with 25 professional software developers in focus groups. We identify which security information is considered helpful in avoiding insecure cryptographic API use during development. Concerning console messages, participants suggested five core elements, namely message classification, title message, code location, link to detailed external resources, and color. Design guidelines for end-user warnings are only partially suitable in this context. Participants emphasized the importance of tailoring the detail and content of security information to the context. Console warnings call for concise communication; further information needs to be linked externally. Therefore, security feedback should transcend tools and should be adjustable by software developers across development tools, considering the work context and developer needs.

Topics & Concepts

Computer scienceComputer securityContext (archaeology)CryptographySoftware security assuranceParticipatory designInformation securitySoftwareFocus (optics)World Wide WebInternet privacySecurity serviceEngineeringProgramming languageParallelsPhysicsPaleontologyOpticsMechanical engineeringBiologyAdvanced Malware Detection TechniquesPrivacy, Security, and Data ProtectionUser Authentication and Security Systems
Listen to Developers! A Participatory Design Study on Security Warnings for Cryptographic APIs | Litcius