Episode Notes:
About our Guest:
Maike Raphael
https://www.itsec.uni-hannover.de/en/usec/team/raphael
Papers or resources mentioned in this episode:
Raphael, M. M., Kanta, A., Seebonn, R., Dürmuth, M., & Cobb, C. (2024). Batman hacked my password: A subtitle-based analysis of password depiction in movies. In Proceedings of the Twentieth Symposium on Usable Privacy and Security (pp. 199-211). USENIX Association. https://www.usenix.org/conference/soups2024/presentation/raphael
Other relevant resources:
Information and supplementary materials on the paper "Batman Hacked My Password"
https://www.itsec.uni-hannover.de/de/usec/forschung/medien/password-depiction-in-movies
If you are interested in the right to download the subtitles.
The data source (opensubtitles.org) statement regarding copyright.
https://www.opensubtitles.org/en/dmca
The website has an API with the no limit to the total number of subitles that can be downloaded, only rate limiting. The research team didn't obtain the subtitles this way, but the source they got them from may have. In either case it shows opensubtitles.org views about how their service can be used.
https://opensubtitles.stoplight.io/docs/opensubtitles-api/e3750fd63a100-getting-started
Other:
I had a bunch of movie clips that I was going to include as examples, but with the way that platforms handle DMCA I just don't want to have to bother with trying to assert a claim to fair use. If you are interested I would recommend having a look at the password scene from Horse Feathers (1932) with Groucho Marx, and there is a scene in Iron Man 3 (2013) where Tony Stark asks James Rhodes for his password, and everyone laughs at the bad password. I recommend you watch Kung Fury from 2015 for their parody treatment of the "hackerman". It is actually on YouTube https://youtu.be/bS5P_LAqiVg?si=-OL8Mr1OLY9Dd081