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E-raamat: Rules of Security: Staying Safe in a Risky World

(Honorary Principal Research Fellow, Institute for Security Science and Technology, Imperial College London and Distinguished Fellow, Royal United Services Institute for Defence and Security Studies (RUSI) in Whitehall)
  • Formaat: 224 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 16-May-2019
  • Kirjastus: Oxford University Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780192556622
  • Formaat - PDF+DRM
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  • Formaat: 224 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 16-May-2019
  • Kirjastus: Oxford University Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780192556622

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This book demystifies and explains a subject that affects every one of us in our private lives and at work. Security is a practical discipline concerned with safeguarding lives, property, information, wealth, reputations, and social wellbeing. It is the basis of civilised society. People, businesses, and nations cannot thrive in its absence, whereas the right kind of security frees us to live fulfilling lives.

But deciding what is needed, and then making it happen, is not easy. The threats to our security are complex and continually evolving, as criminals, hackers, terrorists, and hostile foreign states continually find new ways of staying one step ahead of us, their potential victims. At the same time, we are continually creating new vulnerabilities as we adopt new technologies and new ways of working. Those who do not understand the fundamentals of security, risk, and resilience open themselves, and those around them, to avoidable dangers, needless anxieties, and unnecessary costs. Inadequate security may leave them exposed to intolerable risks, while the wrong kind of security is expensive, intrusive, and ineffective.

In his essential new book, world-leading security expert Paul Martin sets out the ten most important guiding principles of protective security and resilience. Clearly expressed in the form of simple but powerful rules of thumb, their purpose is to help solve complicated problems for which there are no textbook solutions. The rules offer a powerful toolkit, designed to work in many different situations, including the cyber domain. When we are faced with novel problems requiring complex decisions, it is easy to focus on the wrong things. These rules remind us what really matters.

The psychological and behavioural aspects of security are key themes throughout the book. People lie at the heart of security. The criminals, terrorists, and hackers are social animals with complex emotions and psychological predispositions. So too are the victims of those attackers and the security practitioners who strive to protect us. The human dimension is therefore crucial to understanding security.

The Rules of Security will help anyone with an interest in their own security and that of their home, family, business, or society. It will be indispensable to those in positions of responsibility, allowing them to understand how best to protect their organisation, people, and assets. It assumes no expert technical knowledge and explains the ideas in clear and simple terms. It will appeal to anyone with an interest in security. If you read only one book about security, it should be this one.

Arvustused

An impeccable and important work that security people can push into the hands of others [ ...] who want an authoritative, yet crisply-written book on security. * Professional Security * ... a deceptively easy read in that there are ten bite-size takeaway nuggets of digestible information that will make you more aware, informed and alert. Where Martin scores heavily is in the authenticity he brings to the subject, making his set of ideas less of a management self-help book and more of a first step towards protecting your assets. * Nick Smith, E & T Magazine *

Rule 1 Security Rules
1(9)
Why Does Security Matter?
1(3)
What Is Security For?
4(4)
Security Builds Trust and Confidence
8(2)
Rule 2 Risk is the Key
10(21)
What Is Risk?
10(2)
Threat
12(1)
Vulnerability
13(2)
Impact
15(1)
The Risk Chain and the Risk Matrix
16(5)
Security Risks Are Dynamic and Adaptive
21(4)
Catastrophes Are Non-Linear
25(6)
Rule 3 Think Like an Attacker
31(18)
Know Your Enemy
31(1)
Yes, They Really Would Do That
32(4)
Both Sides Have Secrets
36(5)
Contemplate the Future
41(8)
Rule 4 There Are Three Ways to Reduce Risk
49(26)
Managing Risk
49(2)
Know What You Are Trying to Protect
51(2)
Mind Your Third Parties
53(2)
Decide How Much Risk to Tolerate
55(2)
Reducing Threat, Vulnerability, and Impact
57(13)
Managing by Outcomes
70(1)
Other Ways of (Not) Managing Risk
71(4)
Rule 5 Build Resilience
75(21)
Resilience, Passive and Active
76(3)
Reducing Impact
79(6)
Dealing with Crises
85(4)
Building Active Resilience
89(3)
Personal Resilience
92(4)
Rule 6 It's All About People
96(24)
The Insider Risk
97(4)
Personnel Security
101(13)
Security Culture
114(2)
The Currency Is Trust
116(4)
Rule 7 Everyone Is Biased
120(22)
Reacting to Danger
121(5)
Misreading Risk
126(8)
Mishandling Risk
134(4)
Aiming Off
138(4)
Rule 8 Cyber Is New Ways of Doing Old Things
142(31)
The C-Word
142(2)
Cyber Is Different---But Not That Different
144(5)
Cyber Risk
149(17)
Cyber Espionage
150(5)
Cyber Sabotage
155(6)
Cyber Subversion
161(5)
Cyber Threats, Vulnerabilities, and Impacts
166(7)
Rule 9 Know What Good Looks Like
173(21)
Holistic
174(3)
Understandable
177(2)
Regularly Tested
179(2)
Well Measured
181(5)
Layered
186(3)
Designed-In
189(2)
Dynamic
191(3)
Rule 10 Know Who's in Charge
194(16)
Governance
194(2)
Clear Lines of Responsibility
196(7)
Integrated Structure
203(3)
Good Leadership
206(1)
Independent Assurance
207(1)
Sufficient Bandwidth
208(2)
The Rules in Sum 210(7)
Glossary 217(6)
Notes 223(14)
References 237(8)
About the Author 245(2)
Index 247
Dr Paul Martin CBE is a security practitioner with thirty years' experience in the national security arena. During a career in UK government service from 1986 to 2013 he held a variety of senior positions and was awarded the CBE in 2013 for his services to defence. From 2013 to 2016 he was the Director of Security for the UK Parliament, with responsibility for the physical, personnel, and cyber security of both Houses. Paul was educated at the University of Cambridge, where he graduated in natural sciences and took a PhD in behavioural biology, and Stanford University, where he was Harkness Fellow in the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences. He subsequently lectured and researched at the University of Cambridge and was a Fellow of Wolfson College Cambridge, before leaving academia to join government service.