Human Vulnerability Attack in Saudi Arabia
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Date
2025
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Publisher
University of Portsmouth
Abstract
Human vulnerability attacks, which use people rather than technology to get into networks, are
a growing cybersecurity problem. This research examines human vulnerability attacks in all
key Saudi Arabian industries and proposes effective mitigation techniques. A quantitative
survey was used to collect data from Saudi Arabian banking, healthcare, energy, and
government professionals. According to the results, psychological biases and repeated lapses
dramatically increase cyberattack risk. A majority of respondents agreed that combining
training, policy, and technology minimizes the danger of human vulnerability assaults,
supporting the theory. Ineffective training and incomplete technical implementation were
found, highlighting the need for adjustments. The research underlines the significance of
leadership in developing cybersecurity awareness and establishing a security-conscious culture
in enterprises. Implementing technical defenses, improving training, and strengthening policies
are the study's cybersecurity suggestions. Future studies should increase sample size, examine
particular psychological biases, and assess the long-term efficacy of integrated cybersecurity
methods.
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Keywords
Human vulnerability, cybersecurity, psychological biases, security, Cyber attack