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Practical Internet of Things Security

You're reading from   Practical Internet of Things Security Design a security framework for an Internet connected ecosystem

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Product type Paperback
Published in Nov 2018
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781788625821
Length 382 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
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Authors (2):
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Brian Russell Brian Russell
Author Profile Icon Brian Russell
Brian Russell
Drew Van Duren Drew Van Duren
Author Profile Icon Drew Van Duren
Drew Van Duren
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Toc

Table of Contents (13) Chapters Close

Preface 1. A Brave New World FREE CHAPTER 2. Vulnerabilities, Attacks, and Countermeasures 3. Approaches to Secure Development 4. Secure Design of IoT Devices 5. Operational Security Life Cycle 6. Cryptographic Fundamentals for IoT Security Engineering 7. Identity and Access Management Solutions for the IoT 8. Mitigating IoT Privacy Concerns 9. Setting Up an IoT Compliance Monitoring Program 10. Cloud Security for the IoT 11. IoT Incident Response and Forensic Analysis 12. Other Books You May Enjoy

Handling non-functional requirements 

Non-functional requirements handle the aspects of the system that are not directly related to the functionalities of the system. SEBOK—the systems engineering body of knowledge maintained jointly by INCOSE and the IEEE computer society (https://www.sebokwiki.org/wiki/Non-Functional_Requirements_(glossary))—defines them as follows: 

Quality attributes or characteristics that are desired in a system, that define how a system is supposed to be.

Non-functional requirements include security, performance, availability, resilience, safety, reliability, dependability, scalability, sustainability, portability, and interoperability.

IoT systems will require different variations of these requirements, depending on the context in which the system is designed to operate (C. Warren Axelrod, Engineering Safe and Secure Software...

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