Despite that information security issues have started to gain managers' attention since computers were first put in use, information security management has not yet reached its maturity and is still requiring input from both the academia and industry. Indeed, today's businesses have still not been widely convinced to invest in information security initiatives, resulting in the shrinking budget allocated for organisational information security. One common finding shows that organisational awareness towards information security can serve as a great driver that would help firms realise the business values of such investments. In addition, such emphasis on the awareness suggests the essential role of training, education and dissemination of quality information. As a result, one could argue that the available information has an indirect influence on the adoption rate of information security, through the impact of awareness. This research analyses the possibility of whether information availability could directly drive the intention to invest in information security initiatives by removing the uncertainty surrounding such investments. In other words, information availability per se could drive investing intention by reducing the obstacle - its uncertainty - rather than stimulate business needs through the enforcing of another factor that is awareness. Through intensive reviews on the literature, this paper synthesises and reports on the definition of information availability and how it could drive the intention to invest in information security.
History
Start page
71
End page
80
Total pages
10
Outlet
Proceedings of the 4th International Conference on Information Systems Management and Evaluation ICIME 2013
Editors
John Blooma, Mathews Nkhoma, Nelson Leung
Name of conference
ICIME 2013
Publisher
Academic Conferences and Publishing International Limited