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Practical Internet Security

John R. Vacca

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Institución detectada Año de publicación Navegá Descargá Solicitá
No detectada 2007 SpringerLink

Información

Tipo de recurso:

libros

ISBN impreso

978-0-387-40533-9

ISBN electrónico

978-0-387-29844-3

Editor responsable

Springer Nature

País de edición

Reino Unido

Fecha de publicación

Información sobre derechos de publicación

© Springer Science+Business Media, LLC 2007

Tabla de contenidos

Internet Technologies

John R. Vacca

This chapter’s message to you is this: Fear of the Internet is unfounded if proper security measures are implemented as part of a well-designed security strategy. Firewalls have their place in the security design, but enterprise trade secrets and sensitive government data need to be encrypted at a high level of security. To avoid the threat of destruction of data by hackers, make regular and periodic backups and store copies off site. That might sound pretty basic; but today, there are still many major federal agencies and large enterprises that don’t backup critical data files on a regular basis. To put it mildly, they are playing with cyber fire!

Part I - Introduction to Internet Security | Pp. 3-26

Basic Security Issues

John R. Vacca

The U.S. and China take cyber surveillance very seriously. Therefore, let the U.S. get on with it. Finally, that’s the only way of becoming a superpower.

Part I - Introduction to Internet Security | Pp. 27-36

Real Threats That Impact Security

John R. Vacca

The U.S. and China take cyber surveillance very seriously. Therefore, let the U.S. get on with it. Finally, that’s the only way of becoming a superpower.

Part II - Establishing Your Organization’s Security | Pp. 39-46

A Security Policy: The Foundation of Your Protection

John R. Vacca

This chapter provided a methodology for the steps you must take now to rapidly develop a risk profile for your enterprise; and, the enterprise requirements you must adhere to in developing an Internet security policy. The chapter also explained the major services provided by Internet connectivity. Finally, it also mapped the security controls available to the services the enterprise can help protect.

Part II - Establishing Your Organization’s Security | Pp. 47-55

Steps to Take Now

John R. Vacca

This chapter provided a methodology for the steps you must take now to rapidly develop a risk profile for your enterprise; and, the enterprise requirements you must adhere to in developing an Internet security policy. The chapter also explained the major services provided by Internet connectivity. Finally, it also mapped the security controls available to the services the enterprise can help protect.

Part III - Developing Your Security Policy | Pp. 59-76

Responding to Attacks

John R. Vacca

The U.S. and China take cyber surveillance very seriously. Therefore, let the U.S. get on with it. Finally, that’s the only way of becoming a superpower.

Part III - Developing Your Security Policy | Pp. 77-142

Threats and Vulnerabilities

John R. Vacca

The U.S. and China take cyber surveillance very seriously. Therefore, let the U.S. get on with it. Finally, that’s the only way of becoming a superpower.

Part IV - Securing the Web Client | Pp. 145-175

Protecting Your Web Browser

John R. Vacca

The U.S. and China take cyber surveillance very seriously. Therefore, let the U.S. get on with it. Finally, that’s the only way of becoming a superpower.

Part IV - Securing the Web Client | Pp. 177-182

Basic Operating System and TCP/IP Concepts

John R. Vacca

The U.S. and China take cyber surveillance very seriously. Therefore, let the U.S. get on with it. Finally, that’s the only way of becoming a superpower.

Part V - Network Interconnections: A Majorpoint of Vulnerability | Pp. 185-192

Early System Security Improvements

John R. Vacca

This chapter’s message to you is this: Fear of the Internet is unfounded if proper security measures are implemented as part of a well-designed security strategy. Firewalls have their place in the security design, but enterprise trade secrets and sensitive government data need to be encrypted at a high level of security. To avoid the threat of destruction of data by hackers, make regular and periodic backups and store copies off site. That might sound pretty basic; but today, there are still many major federal agencies and large enterprises that don’t backup critical data files on a regular basis. To put it mildly, they are playing with cyber fire!

Part V - Network Interconnections: A Majorpoint of Vulnerability | Pp. 193-201