(comment on ZDnet about security admin pet peeves)
Of course people don’t like security, it tends to be obtrusive, unfriendly, difficult, oppressive, and demanding practices that are very un-human. It also is something that can often be bypassed with varying ease by anyone determined to do so.
For any kind of security to gain real traction, it has to be tailored to people and become extensions to individuals as much as possible. Remove the oppression. Imagine for instance, being able to remotely “feel” if your house is being intruded.. see and hear who they are, and if you want them out, being able to do so as easily as moving your own body. Your house would know you, it becomes part of you. Regulations should keep it non-violent but no agency would dictate your interactions with your house.
That’s the kind of sci-fi that should be the goal with security for a variety of functional and ethical reasons.