Patrick Kelley is a security, privacy, and anti-abuse researcher with a decade of experience translating scholarly insights into practical security solutions. He currently leads security, privacy and anti-abuse research at Google, applying usability-centric approaches to complex policy and enforcement challenges. Former assistant professor at the University of New Mexico, he built a lab focused on interface and user experience around privacy and security, bridging academic and industry perspectives. His PhD work at Carnegie Mellon centered on information design, usability, and education around privacy, with projects on passwords, location-sharing, and Android permission displays. Earlier, he contributed to MIST at Rochester Institute of Technology with Kodak and helped launch Wombat Security Technologies' anti-phishing efforts as a consultant. Based in New York, he holds a BS in Computer Engineering, Mathematics, and English from RIT and advanced degrees from CMU, reflecting a blend of technical depth and interdisciplinary communication.
11 years of coding experience
6 years of employment as a software developer
B.S., Computer Engineering, Mathematics, English, B.S., Computer Engineering, Mathematics, English at Rochester Institute of Technology
Master's degree, Computation, Organizations, and Society, Master's degree, Computation, Organizations, and Society at Carnegie Mellon University
Transparent Statistics in HCI guidelines, FAQs, and exemplar analyses
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