Information Security Science: Measuring the Vulnerability to Data Compromises

Information Security Science: Measuring the Vulnerability to Data Compromises provides the scientific background and analytic techniques to understand and measure the risk associated with information security threats. This is not a traditional IT security book since it includes methods of information compromise that are not typically addressed in textbooks or journals.

In particular, it explores the physical nature of information security risk, and in so doing exposes subtle, yet revealing, connections between information security, physical security, information technology, and information theory. This book is also a practical risk management guide, as it explains the fundamental scientific principles that are directly relevant to information security, specifies a structured methodology to evaluate a host of threats and attack vectors, identifies unique metrics that point to root causes of technology risk, and enables estimates of the effectiveness of risk mitigation.

This book is the definitive reference for scientists and engineers with no background in security, and is ideal for security analysts and practitioners who lack scientific training. Importantly, it provides security professionals with the tools to prioritize information security controls and thereby develop cost-effective risk management strategies.

  • Specifies the analytic and scientific methods necessary to estimate the vulnerability to information loss for a spectrum of threats and attack vectors
  • Represents a unique treatment of the nexus between physical and information security that includes risk analyses of IT device emanations, visible information, audible information, physical information assets, and virtualized IT environments
  • Identifies metrics that point to the root cause of information technology risk and thereby assist security professionals in developing risk management strategies
  • Analyzes numerous threat scenarios and specifies countermeasures based on derived quantitative metrics
  • Provides chapter introductions and end-of-chapter summaries to enhance the reader’s experience and facilitate an appreciation for key concepts
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Information Security Science: Measuring the Vulnerability to Data Compromises

Information Security Science: Measuring the Vulnerability to Data Compromises provides the scientific background and analytic techniques to understand and measure the risk associated with information security threats. This is not a traditional IT security book since it includes methods of information compromise that are not typically addressed in textbooks or journals.

In particular, it explores the physical nature of information security risk, and in so doing exposes subtle, yet revealing, connections between information security, physical security, information technology, and information theory. This book is also a practical risk management guide, as it explains the fundamental scientific principles that are directly relevant to information security, specifies a structured methodology to evaluate a host of threats and attack vectors, identifies unique metrics that point to root causes of technology risk, and enables estimates of the effectiveness of risk mitigation.

This book is the definitive reference for scientists and engineers with no background in security, and is ideal for security analysts and practitioners who lack scientific training. Importantly, it provides security professionals with the tools to prioritize information security controls and thereby develop cost-effective risk management strategies.

  • Specifies the analytic and scientific methods necessary to estimate the vulnerability to information loss for a spectrum of threats and attack vectors
  • Represents a unique treatment of the nexus between physical and information security that includes risk analyses of IT device emanations, visible information, audible information, physical information assets, and virtualized IT environments
  • Identifies metrics that point to the root cause of information technology risk and thereby assist security professionals in developing risk management strategies
  • Analyzes numerous threat scenarios and specifies countermeasures based on derived quantitative metrics
  • Provides chapter introductions and end-of-chapter summaries to enhance the reader’s experience and facilitate an appreciation for key concepts
52.49 In Stock
Information Security Science: Measuring the Vulnerability to Data Compromises

Information Security Science: Measuring the Vulnerability to Data Compromises

by Carl Young
Information Security Science: Measuring the Vulnerability to Data Compromises

Information Security Science: Measuring the Vulnerability to Data Compromises

by Carl Young

eBook

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Overview

Information Security Science: Measuring the Vulnerability to Data Compromises provides the scientific background and analytic techniques to understand and measure the risk associated with information security threats. This is not a traditional IT security book since it includes methods of information compromise that are not typically addressed in textbooks or journals.

In particular, it explores the physical nature of information security risk, and in so doing exposes subtle, yet revealing, connections between information security, physical security, information technology, and information theory. This book is also a practical risk management guide, as it explains the fundamental scientific principles that are directly relevant to information security, specifies a structured methodology to evaluate a host of threats and attack vectors, identifies unique metrics that point to root causes of technology risk, and enables estimates of the effectiveness of risk mitigation.

This book is the definitive reference for scientists and engineers with no background in security, and is ideal for security analysts and practitioners who lack scientific training. Importantly, it provides security professionals with the tools to prioritize information security controls and thereby develop cost-effective risk management strategies.

  • Specifies the analytic and scientific methods necessary to estimate the vulnerability to information loss for a spectrum of threats and attack vectors
  • Represents a unique treatment of the nexus between physical and information security that includes risk analyses of IT device emanations, visible information, audible information, physical information assets, and virtualized IT environments
  • Identifies metrics that point to the root cause of information technology risk and thereby assist security professionals in developing risk management strategies
  • Analyzes numerous threat scenarios and specifies countermeasures based on derived quantitative metrics
  • Provides chapter introductions and end-of-chapter summaries to enhance the reader’s experience and facilitate an appreciation for key concepts

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780128096468
Publisher: Elsevier Science
Publication date: 06/23/2016
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 406
File size: 22 MB
Note: This product may take a few minutes to download.

About the Author

Carl S. Young is a recognized subject matter expert in information and physical security risk management. He is currently a Managing Director and the Chief Security Officer at Stroz Friedberg, an international security risk consulting firm. He is the former Global Head of Physical Security Technology at Goldman Sachs as well as a former Senior Executive and Supervisory Special Agent at the FBI. He was also a consultant to the JASON Defense Advisory Group. Mr. Young is the author of Metrics and Methods for Security Risk Management (Syngress, 2010), and The Science and Technology of Counterterrorism (Butterworth-Heinemann, 2014) as well as numerous journal publications. In 1997 he was awarded the President’s Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board (PFIAB) James R. Killian Award by the White House for significant individual contributions to U.S. national security. Mr. Young received undergraduate and graduate degrees in mathematics and physics from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

Table of Contents

Part I: Threats, risk and risk assessments

Chapter 1: Information Security Threats and Risk

Chapter 2: Modeling Information Security Risk

Part II: Scientific fundamentals

Chapter 3: Physics and Information Security

Chapter 4: Electromagnetic Waves

Chapter 5: Noise, Interference, and Emanations

Part III: The compromise of signals

Chapter 6: Signals and Information Security

Chapter 7: The Compromise of Electromagnetic Signals

Chapter 8: Countermeasures to Electromagnetic Signal Compromises

Chapter 9: Visual Information Security

Chapter 10: Audible Information Security

Part IV: Information technology risk

Chapter 11: Information Technology Risk Factors

Chapter 12: Information Technology Risk Measurements and Metrics

Chapter 13: Special Information Technology Risk Measurements and Metrics

Part V: The physical security of information assets

Chapter 14: Physical Security Controls

Chapter 15: Data Centers: A Concentration of Information Security Risk

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Provides the scientific background, analytic methods, and quantitative metrics to allow scientists and engineers with no background in security to estimate vulnerability to a spectrum of information security threats

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