Why don't we defend better? : data breaches, risk management, and public policy / Robert H. Sloan, Richard Warner.
Material type: TextPublisher: Boca Raton, FL : CRC Press/Taylor & Francis Group, [2019]Edition: First editionDescription: 1 online resourceContent type:- text
- computer
- online resource
- 9781351127288
- 1351127284
- 9781351127301
- 1351127306
- 9781351127295
- 1351127292
- 9781351127271
- 1351127276
- Computer networks -- Security measures -- Government policy
- Computer security -- Government policy
- Business -- Data processing -- Security measures
- Computer crimes -- Risk assessment
- COMPUTERS / General
- COMPUTERS / Computer Graphics / Game Programming & Design
- COMPUTERS / Database Management / Data Mining
- 005.8 23
- TK5105.59 .S585 2019eb
Introduction -- Software vulnerabilities -- (Mis)management : Failing to defend against technical attacks -- A mandatory reporting proposal -- Outsourcing security -- The internet of things -- Human vulnerabilities -- Seeing the forest : An overview of policy proposals.
"The wave of data breaches raises two pressing questions : Why don't we defend our networks better? And, what practical incentives can we create to improve our defenses? Why Don't We Defend Better? : Data Breaches, Risk Management, and Public Policy answers those questions. It distinguishes three technical sources of data breaches corresponding to three types of vulnerabilities: software, human, and network. It discusses two risk management goals: business and consumer. The authors propose mandatory anonymous reporting of information as an essential step toward better defense, as well as a general reporting requirement. They also provide a systematic overview of data breach defense, combining technological and public policy considerations"-- Provided by publisher.
OCLC-licensed vendor bibliographic record.
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