NaNoWriMo: Data Privacy Edition

A Siamese cat sitting in front of an open laptop computer.
‘Tis the season for all things writing. Your cat might have some opinions about that… Source: https://www.flickr.com/photos/cedwardmoran/4179761302/

Welcome to this week’s Tip of the Hat!

Today marks the second day of NaNoWriMo – National Novel Writing Month. For years many aspiring (and established) writers spend countless hours writing to reach the goal of a 50,000-word manuscript. If you do the math, you would have to write about 1700 words a day to reach the goal! Novels are the primary genre for NaNoWriMo, but that hasn’t stopped others from taking the idea of a writing month and using it for other genres. For example, this month is also AcWriMo, or Academic Writing Month, for academics who need to buckle down to write that research book or article.

With November being the month of writing, why not join in the fray with writing about data security and privacy? Our recent Cybersecurity Awareness Month posts discussed the importance of interactive and engaging training, so the question now is how you can build a data security and privacy training that won’t put staff to sleep, or worse, demotivate them from taking proactive privacy and security measures to protect patron data. One way to create engaging training is to use stories and scenarios. Drawing from real-world examples is a start, but the challenge is turning that example into a scenario where training participants are invested in addressing the problems presented in the story. Here are a few tips to help you with the writing process!

Characters – who are the major players in the scenario? Staff person, patron, vendor, random person who comes off the street, the cat who keeps sneaking into the library building? Once you have the characters, what roles do they play? What are their motivations? Why do they do the things they do or think the way they think?

So many questions, even for a short scenario! Take a page from User Experience (UX) and create personas to help with the character-building process. Even a shortlist of who they are, what motivates them, what they want, and what they know can help hone the scenario narrative as well as introduce common types of motivations, knowledge/skill levels, and different types of threat actors or people that might face additional privacy risks to training attendees. 

If you need more inspiration for characters, may I introduce you to Alice and Bob and their crypto-friends?

Story – Your real-world examples or the case studies you learn from others are two good places to start. That shouldn’t stop you from exploring building scenarios from scratch! Or perhaps you would like to modify the real-world examples into a scenario that would be a better fit for the training you’re developing. One concept to explore for your scenario is threat modeling, or identifying potential weaknesses at the library (systems, procedures, policies, etc.), who or what might take advantage of the weakness, and what can be done to either avoid or mitigate the threat. The threat modeling process can uncover a complex web of threats and vulnerabilities that interact with each other. On the other hand, it could lead to valuable conversations with trainees about how one vulnerability can create a ripple effect if exploited, or how a threat actor isn’t always acting with malicious intent. Sometimes the most dangerous threat actors are not aware that they are putting data privacy at risk such as a staff person with good intentions sharing patron data without knowledge of patron privacy procedures. 

Visual aids – What’s a story without visual aids? You might not have the resources or acting chops to create scenario videos, but there are always pictures to give life to your characters and scenarios. Luckily, there are several Creative Commons licensed resources to choose from:

You can also search for CC-licensed photos on Flickr and Creative Commons.

There are a lot more you can do with building scenarios for your data privacy and security trainings, but these three areas will hopefully get you started down the path of becoming an accomplished author… of training scenarios 😉 Enjoy your writing journey, and good luck!