IFD:Nutzerstudien WiSe1314/Gruppe Anmeldung

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< IFD:Nutzerstudien WiSe1314
Revision as of 20:35, 18 December 2013 by Hans (talk | contribs) (added my comments)

Aims of data gathering


During the course "Nutzerstudien" we wanted to know how important security is for students at our age, what they expect from chat apps and what their problems/whishes are. Main focus was also the question of authenticity. For that reason we started to interview a few people from our social environment.


Data gathering: Interviews/Observation

1. Interviews:

Interview partner:

Number Age class Course of studies
1 <20 Arts
2 <20 Arts
3 20-25 Science/Engineering
4 25-30 Science/Engineering
5 <20 Fine Arts/Design
6 <20 Fine Arts/Design
7 <20 Fine Arts/Design

Reasons for choosing these people:

We wanted to figure out the differences between the students of Arts, Fine Arts/Design and Science/Engineering. So we chose people from our social environment. Because we are students from different courses of studies (Arts, Fine Arts/Design and Science/Engineering) we had the chance to interview these types of students. Thereby we had a huge spectrum of users.


Central questions:

  • What chat apps/programs do you use and for what purposes (one-on-one interviews or group discussions, image, video and link transfer)?
  • Where do you see advantages and disadvantages of your favorite chat program?
  • How important authentication is for you?
  • How should a trustable profile be? What information are important?
  • In what situations you prefer the phone or an E-Mail before chatting?
  • What are requirements for you to use a new app with guaranteed security?
  • How often do you use them and how important they are for you?
  • How important is security for you while chatting with people?
  • What measures do you probably adopt to be safe?
  • What functions and design features do you find most important for a chat app?


2. Observation:

Next week we want to make some usability tests of the app (ChatSecure) to find out how others deal with the login process. We want to find out if the log in process is intuitive for the user or not. So we get to know about user's handling with apps and their expectations. We hope to get suggestions and ideas for a better log in process based on the user's behavior.

Great idea. It is not easy though to see why for an outsider. You could fix it by explaining first, why and how you canged to the topic "login" and because of this it could not be part of the interview process one or two weeks ago.

--JanD 19:58, 13 December 2013 (CET)

I tried to explain what we want to achieve with the usability tests. Ok? [M.E.]
I think this is an area that definitely needs analysis from a usability perspective, and having feedback from people who have limited experience with ChatSecure will be quite helpful. Having a few different setup scenarios to test with would be very useful since the login is quite different depending on what kind of account, etc. For example, using the same Google account as the phone should be quite simple. Using a Facebook acocunt should be a little more work, but straightforward. Using any account with Tor/Orbot would be trickier. And perhaps the hardest will be setting up an account on a server like jabber.ccc.de

--Hans 21:17, 18 December 2013 (CET)

Data Analysis & Main Results

  • App Requirements
    • accessibility is of prime importance, so the app have to be widespread to make the user downloading it.
    • The app should be for free.
    • For the user it’s important to be up-to-date and flexible with messages. So he/she prefers an app for chatting.
  • Visual Design
    • Complexity takes a lot of time, so you need a simple, intuitive, neatly arranged design, which looks uniform on all gadgets.
  • Interface & Functions
    • It is handy for the user to have an interface, where you can see who is online at the moment and when a contact was online the last time.
    • The app should contain a function to let the user know if the chat partner read the messages because it faciliate the communication.
    • The user wants to send out photos/videos.
    • The user likes to express its emotion with a lot of smileys.
    • The function "writes..." is not necassary.
      not quite sure what this is, could you elaborate on it?
      --Hans 21:35, 18 December 2013 (CET)


  • Security
    • It would be useful to have a password for the app.
    • To feel safe, the user desires to have a security warranty.
    • It is important that apps are immune from viruses.
    • Important information, link, photos, videos, … are often sent by E-Mail.
    • Distrust towards apps results e.g. from missing knowledge about safety and smart phone-apps.
    • People use safety-options of social networks (e.g. Facebook) but don’t know, if they really work.
  • Authenticity
    • If you want a trustworthy profile you have to find a good balance between too much and too little information.
    • (To much) Personalized advertising makes the user feel insecure.
    • A “real” profile picture is soothing for the user.
    • Authenticity doesn't loom large for students personally.
There are lots of "the user wants". It would be easier for outsiders to understand, if you could explain why the user wants this (if you know that. Naturally, my request is not asking for inventing explanations! If you only know that users want but not why you could make it subject of further research)

--JanD 19:58, 13 December 2013 (CET)

I tried to phrase and explain some points in another way. Is it ok? [M.E.]
Definitely some interesting results here, it sounds like people are interested in security and are trying to figure out ways to increase their own security. It would be quite valuable to explore ideas of how people represent their concerns, and how they aim to increase their own security. About Authenticity, its a hard concept in computers. I think most computer users don't understand that its easy to fake messages. My guess is that people are concerned about it, but don't really understand the technical issues so they assume things they receive are what they seem to be. A parallel test on this topic could be very illuminating, like showing users how to generate fake emails, messages, etc. to make them appear they are coming from someone they trust. Also, I'm not quite sure what the point of view of all of these bullet points are. Are they from the person running the tests, or are the things that the users in the tests communicated? My guess is that they are all summaries of things communicated from the users.

--Hans 21:35, 18 December 2013 (CET)

What specific problem we want to solve

We want to solve some problems with the login-process and make it easier to use. It's hard and circular to login with one of your accounts, because there are too many steps until you are finally logged in. Moreover the buttons are difficult to find on the interface. Therefore we want to create a new login-process.

Nice proposal. Are you really talking about the log-in or about setting up a new (Jabber) account? Because in my experience it is not easy to set it up, but once you have your account working and data saved, it behaves very well. But please prove me wrong if that is a singular experience

--JanD 19:58, 13 December 2013 (CET)

We really focus on the sign up process. There is the problem that you don't get an advice to enter the password but it is nessacary. The process is very inconvenient, it needs to many steps till you can start to chat so that we want to create an easier way. [M.E.]
I think this is important work since the process is currently confusing, but also complicated so its not easy to fix the usability issues. But its also not such a huge task, so you should be able to get solid results in the time you have in this class.

--Hans 21:35, 18 December 2013 (CET)



Plans – how we want to solve the problem(s)

Method 1: Other application's test

First we start to analyse the login process at other applications. We found out that WhatsApp is the most widespread app to chat for our target group, second one is the Facebook messanger.

1. WhatsApp

This application doesn't contain a login process. You only have to choose the app to be online and you directly see all of your conversations. It is quite easy and intuitive.

2. Facebook Messenger

This application functions nearly the same way as WhatsApp, so you don't need a password to sign in.

Our conclusion:

Both applications manage without a password. That's quite intuitive but it isn't quite save. While doing our interviews we experienced that it would be convenient to have a password to have a safety warranty (e.g. in case of losing the smartphone)

Solution:

We want it as intuitive as WhatsApp and Facebook Messenger but we also want it to be save. So there have to be an additional button for entering a password.


Prototyp Anmeldeprozess.jpg

Our first prototype for the login process.


The difficult part here is that there is no known way of making a secure, private connection without some kind of login process. WhatsApp's uses an automatically generated password that it is not hard for a malicious user to generate, getting full access to the whole account. So its security is very poor, but its usability is great. As far as I know, Facebook does require a login, but it just handles it well and it only happens once really. Facebook is probably a better example here. It probably makes the most sense to compare the Facebook mobile app's first time setup/login procedure with ChatSecure's Facebook login procedure. Then additionally, it would be great to see a comparison of other apps like ChatSecure that allow users to use a wide variety of accounts (Xabber, Beem, etc.)

--Hans 21:35, 18 December 2013 (CET)