THE MEMORABLE MESSAGES LEADING TO THE DECISION TO TAKE SECURE MEASURES AGAINST FINANCIAL FRAUD ATTACKS: THE CASE OF SAUDI ARABIAN STUDENTS ABROAD
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Date
2025-05
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UNIVERSITY OF OKLAHOMA
Abstract
Social engineering attacks (SEAs) pose significant challenges today. As attackers exploit various
strategies to manipulate individuals using persuasion techniques and digital tools to deceive
individuals into trusting them. These manipulation strategies are designed to exploit individual
information in order to access confidential details for purposes such as stealing money or
disclosing sensitive information. They encompass a range of tactics, including fraud, phishing,
and vishing, which represent various methods; however, the underlying objective remains
consistent. Since the success or failure of these attacks often depends on individuals’ concern
about the risk and secure behavior, the threats of social engineering attacks may increase among
those engaging in less familiar interactions, such as international students who face language
barriers, cultural differences, and unfamiliar interaction norms. International students, with a
focus on Saudi students abroad in Western countries, including the United States, the United
Kingdom, and Australia as a case study, represent a community navigating diverse challenges
outside their home countries, yet they are often overlooked in communication studies. Using an
open-ended online survey, this study employed an inductive qualitative content analysis
approach to analyze participants’ fraud-related stories and messages to identify whether different
forms of communication affect their concerns about the SEAs’ risk and behavioral responses to
avoid such risk. Participants were asked to recall communication events and memorable
messages, as well as report any protective behaviors they adopted to safeguard themselves
against SEAs’ attacks. The analysis explored whether different forms of communication,
focusing on memorable messages, influenced Saudi students abroad to adopt secure behavior and
become concerned about such risks. The main findings revealed that interpersonal
communication with close others and firsthand experiences with scammers appeared to impact
participants’ concern and the risk associated with such experiences. This interactive
communication involved participants sharing, talking about, or evaluating fraud-related
information with others or themselves. Furthermore, the findings also found that this engagement
often triggered intrapersonal reflections, such as feelings of fear of attackers exploiting advanced
technology to make the attacks legitimate and influence trust in conducting online transactions.
Furthermore, these emotional reactions to the prevalent attacks targeting individuals’ confidential
information influenced participants’ decisions to adopt protective actions, reflected in their
avoidance strategies and self-responsibility in financial matters and online behavior. Culture and
religious values rooted in Saudi and Islamic traditions also appeared as key factors influencing
participants to adopt secure behavior, as emerged from their memorable messages reflecting
culture-based wisdom, which influenced the decision to adopt secure behavior against SEAs.
Therefore, the findings expand understanding of message effects and protective behavior change
models. These models suggest that factors such as perceived vulnerability and susceptibility to a
threat motivate individuals to adopt or change behavior to avoid a threat. However, in the Saudi
context, the data revealed that personally relevant as well as cultural and religious values work as
motivators to adopt secure actions against fraud, particularly when the messages are interactive.
Notably, the study supported the idea that factors like vicarious experiences, personal narrative, and emotional relevance were motivating factors in shaping protective behaviors among Saudi
students abroad. Furthermore, the findings maintained factors like self-efficacy and attitudes
toward a secure behavior, reflecting how participants evaluated their capacity to avoid a threat
and engaged in precautionary actions. Practically, this study highlights the importance of
designing anti-fraud communication strategies that are culturally and religiously framed, as
participants shared messages that reflected personally relevant and reflected their cultural and
religious values. This is especially true for Saudi Arabian students abroad, particularly when the
messages are interactive. Furthermore, prevention messages can also leverage storytelling,
emphasize relatable personal experiences to enhance memorability, and influence protective
behavior change. The findings contribute to the literature on international students’ challenges by
revealing how cultural familiarity, rather than exposure to less familiar environments, critically
shapes participants’ concerns and behavioral responses to avoid fraud attacks. Meaning that less
familiar interactions abroad did not appear to impact fraud concerns among Saudi students in
Western countries. Instead, personal and emotional narratives shared within close others’
networks, firsthand experiences and intrapersonal reflection were memorable and influential.
While some participants recalled media messages, authority warnings, and school instructions as
memorable messages to recognize the risk associated with fraud, personal and cultural
connections appeared more effective in motivating protective behavior change. Furthermore, the
findings illustrate how participants’ fraud-related stories involving interactive communication
events not only influenced their concerns about fraud risk and proactive behavior to protect
themselves from the attacks but also enhanced the memorability of such interactions. The study’s
findings provide valuable insights into the influential forms of communication that shape risk
concerns and encourage the adoption of secure behavior against SEAs. Additionally, this study
maps out the behavioral changes that participants adopted to protect themselves against fraud
threats. These behavioral changes captured both technical and interpersonal strategies, including
password management and privacy control. The study also identifies the memorable messages
feature in relation to the communication context that increased the memorability of such
messages, influencing these behavioral shifts. The current study findings expand the boundaries
of the messages’ effect and protective behavior change of the factors associated with adopting or
changing behavior to avoid a threat, particularly in the Saudi Arabian context. Furthermore, the
study findings provide recommendations for improving fraud prevention communication
strategies targeting international students and individuals specifically from collectivist cultures
such as Saudi Arabia, suggesting that culturally framed and personally relevant messages can be
more effective than solely informational appeals.
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Keywords
Social Engineering Attacks (SEAs), fraud concern, secure behavior, Saudi students abroad, communication forms, memorable messages, interactive communication.
