Your browser doesn't support javascript.
Show: 20 | 50 | 100
Results 1 - 2 de 2
Filter
Add filters

Language
Document Type
Year range
1.
Contributions to Management Science ; : 307-362, 2023.
Article in English | Scopus | ID: covidwho-2219909

ABSTRACT

Since its burst in early 2020, the Covid-19 pandemic has deeply affected every aspect of daily life, from international trade and travelling to restrictions on an individual level, becoming a complex multi-level and highly multi-faceted problem. Due to its overarching influence and deep impact, it can be seen as one of the most disruptive Grand Challenges of our time. Different from most other lasting Grand Challenges, such as Climate Change, the pandemic exerted its influence with little ramp-up, rapidly transforming health and health systems, human lives, goods and economic flows, decision-making mechanisms, research and innovation, and many other aspects of life in a very short span of time. Grand Challenges require extraordinary efforts from society as a whole since they need holistic, effective, collaborative endeavours to solve them. One such unique orchestrated effort can be observed in the subsequent series of virtual massive EUvsVirus (https://www.euvsvirus.org/ ) events and committed collaborations (‘hackathon', ‘matchathon', ‘launchathon', ‘community', ‘EIC Covid platform', and the unparalleled ‘Academia Diffusion Experiment' [ADE], analysed in chapter "Academia Diffusion Experiment: Trailblazing the Emergence from Co-Creation” of this book). While this chapter explains ‘what' has been produced with the ADE, inspired by the EUvsVirus phenomenon, the ADE chapter describes ‘how' it has been done. Both are extremely unique in terms of content, procedure, motivation, collaboration, effects—and they attempt to trailblaze at highest level co-creation, co-evolution, and co-dreaming. Hence, situated as the last chapters of this book. This chapter will shed light on the EUvsVirus events, where over 30,000 individuals from 40 countries came together and addressed the complexity of this massive challenge in a pioneering and groundbreaking way. The chapter is focused on analysing the EUvsVirus hackathon (alongside its mentioned unique spillovers) as a tool, method, and process capable of channelling and activating individuals' and institutions' concerns, wills, and commitments into a unique orchestrated open, collaborative response to an urgent Grand Challenge, the pandemic. We are producing a multi-vortex tornado model, resembling the EUvsVirus phenomenon, its components, mechanisms, behaviour and how to replicate it to achieve such disruptive, global organisational effort of co-creation. Especially, the emergence of such collaboration in the face of such urgency leads to the assumption that there are crucial lessons to be learned from this endeavour, quite fittingly encapsulated by these words: ‘We are learning That though we weren't ready for this, We have been readied by it'. Amanda Gorman's New Year poem (https://amandagormanbooks.com/#the-hill-we-climb-and-other-poems or https://edition.cnn.com/videos/tv/2022/01/06/exp-amanda-gorman-nye-poem.cnn ) © 2023, The Author(s).

2.
Ieee Access ; 9:121916-121929, 2021.
Article in English | Web of Science | ID: covidwho-1411581

ABSTRACT

Phishing is an online scam where criminals trick users with various strategies, with the goal of obtaining sensitive information or compromising accounts, systems, and/or other personal or organisational Information Technology resources. Multiple studies have shown that human factors influence the success of phishing attempts. However, these studies were conducted before the COVID-19 pandemic, which is significant because security reports show that the numbers of phishing attacks have been rapidly increasing since the start of COVID-19. This study investigates the extent to which users' fear, anxiety and stress levels regarding COVID-19, impact falling for common and COVID-19 themed phishing scams during the outbreak period. Prior studies have depicted the effects of human behaviour on phishing attacks before the pandemic, such as risk-taking preferences and users' demographic factors, hence this study also focuses on the effects of those factors on the likelihood of phishing victimisation. More concretely, we present the results of a scenario-based roleplay experiment to study the relationship between fear, anxiety, stress, risk-taking, and demographic factors and the success of phishing attacks during the pandemic. The findings indicate that fear of COVID-19 influences the success of COVID-19 specific themed phishing scams, while anxiety, stress, and risk-taking influences the success of both the COVID-19 themed and common phishing scams. Our findings also suggest that the users' education level impacts common phishing attacks during the pandemic.

SELECTION OF CITATIONS
SEARCH DETAIL