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Security through play | IEEE Journals & Magazine | IEEE Xplore

Abstract:

The US Naval Postgraduate School and University of Washington each independently developed informal security-themed tabletop games. [d0x3d!] is a board game in which play...Show More

Abstract:

The US Naval Postgraduate School and University of Washington each independently developed informal security-themed tabletop games. [d0x3d!] is a board game in which players collaborate as white-hat hackers, tasked to retrieve a set of valuable digital assets held by an adversarial network. Control-Alt-Hack is a card game in which three to six players act as white-hat hackers at a security consulting company. These games employ modest pedagogical objectives to expose broad audiences to computer security topics.
Published in: IEEE Security & Privacy ( Volume: 11, Issue: 3, May-June 2013)
Page(s): 64 - 67
Date of Publication: 29 May 2013

ISSN Information:

Computer Science Department, US Naval Postgraduate School, USA
Mark Gondree is a research associate professor in the Naval Postgraduate School's Computer Science Department. Contact him at mgondree@nps.edu.
Mark Gondree is a research associate professor in the Naval Postgraduate School's Computer Science Department. Contact him at mgondree@nps.edu.View more
Computer Science Department, US Naval Postgraduate School, USA
Zachary N.J. Peterson is an assistant professor in the Naval Postgraduate School's Computer Science Department. Contact him at znpeters@nps.edu.
Zachary N.J. Peterson is an assistant professor in the Naval Postgraduate School's Computer Science Department. Contact him at znpeters@nps.edu.View more
Computer Science and Engineering Department, University of Washington, USA
Tamara Denning is a PhD student in the University of Washington's Computer Science and Engineering department. Contact her at tdenning@cs.washington.edu.
Tamara Denning is a PhD student in the University of Washington's Computer Science and Engineering department. Contact her at tdenning@cs.washington.edu.View more

Play as Part of Security Education

Others have claimed success in encoding basic computer science principles in simple games1, 2 Likewise, we hypothesize games might be able to encode skills essential in reasoning about security. Eric Klopfer and his colleagues identified five freedoms essential to play: 3

The freedom to experiment

The freedom to fail

The freedom to fashion identities

The freedom of interpretation, and

The freedom of autonomous effort.

Computer Science Department, US Naval Postgraduate School, USA
Mark Gondree is a research associate professor in the Naval Postgraduate School's Computer Science Department. Contact him at mgondree@nps.edu.
Mark Gondree is a research associate professor in the Naval Postgraduate School's Computer Science Department. Contact him at mgondree@nps.edu.View more
Computer Science Department, US Naval Postgraduate School, USA
Zachary N.J. Peterson is an assistant professor in the Naval Postgraduate School's Computer Science Department. Contact him at znpeters@nps.edu.
Zachary N.J. Peterson is an assistant professor in the Naval Postgraduate School's Computer Science Department. Contact him at znpeters@nps.edu.View more
Computer Science and Engineering Department, University of Washington, USA
Tamara Denning is a PhD student in the University of Washington's Computer Science and Engineering department. Contact her at tdenning@cs.washington.edu.
Tamara Denning is a PhD student in the University of Washington's Computer Science and Engineering department. Contact her at tdenning@cs.washington.edu.View more
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References

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