ABSTRAK
ABSTRACT
Name : Sosthene Bwigenge
Study Program: Magister Ilmu Komputer
Topic : Effects of Smishing Attacks on Service Delivery Using Mobile Technology:
A Case Study of Rwanda
Supervisor : Prof. Ir. Dana Indra Sensuse, M.LIS, Ph.D.
Nowadays, there is an exponential growth in information and communication technologies
that influence mobile technologies and services utilization. These have had a pervasive
impact on both society and our daily lives. In Rwanda, mobile technologies and services have
become tools for accessing services in different social-economic business activities. Mobile
technologies and services have become the place to store valuable information.
Consequently, this makes mobile technologies and services targets for social engineering
attacks that want to get unauthorized access to this information and use it for malicious
purposes. Smishing attacks are common social engineering attacks that pose challenges to
the utilization of mobile technologies and services. Therefore, smishing attack risks have
negative effects on the perception of mobile technologies and service users. Both the
Technology Acceptance Model and Routine Activity Theory have been used to assess
smishing attack risks on mobile technologies and services. This study used both quantitative
and qualitative methods to identify and examine how smishing attack risks negatively affect
the perception of mobile technologies and service users. The researchers organized a survey
of 400 respondents from four provinces of Rwanda and Kigali city. This study used Rwanda
as the case study because Rwanda has fully adopted mobile technology and services to access
services. The model, made up of 10 variables, has been used by this research study to identify
how smishing attacks risk on mobile service quality resulted in a negative influence on the
perception of mobile technology and service users. Data analysis results have found that one
(Social Influence) of the variables is not significant. The remaining variables (Awareness,
Perceived Usefulness, Service Quality, Perceived Security, Perceived Consequences,
Perceived Vulnerability, Perceived Victimization, Satisfaction, and intention to use mobile
devices) are significant. Based on international standards and best practices, this study
created mobile information security management strategies to reduce the risks of smishing
attacks on mobile service quality, improve and enhance service quality, enhance mobile
information security, and increase the mobile device users’ satisfaction, perceived usefulness,
and intention to use mobile devices in service delivery in Rwanda.
Keywords: Mobile devices, Mobile Service, Smishing attack risk, service quality,
information security strategy.
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