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Practical Cybersecurity Architecture

You're reading from   Practical Cybersecurity Architecture A guide to creating and implementing robust designs for cybersecurity architects

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Product type Paperback
Published in Nov 2020
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781838989927
Length 418 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Authors (2):
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Diana Kelley Diana Kelley
Author Profile Icon Diana Kelley
Diana Kelley
Ed Moyle Ed Moyle
Author Profile Icon Ed Moyle
Ed Moyle
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Toc

Table of Contents (14) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Section 1:Security Architecture
2. Chapter 1: What is Cybersecurity Architecture? FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: The Core of Solution Building 4. Section 2: Building an Architecture
5. Chapter 3: Building an Architecture – Scope and Requirements 6. Chapter 4: Building an Architecture – Your Toolbox 7. Chapter 5: Building an Architecture – Developing Enterprise Blueprints 8. Chapter 6: Building an Architecture – Application Blueprints 9. Section 3:Execution
10. Chapter 7: Execution – Applying Architecture Models 11. Chapter 8: Execution – Future-Proofing 12. Chapter 9: Putting It All Together 13. Other Books You May Enjoy

Building blocks of secure design

Any discussion about the requisite tools in your design toolbox wouldn't be complete without some discussion of the actual security mechanisms that you'll employ as part of your design. These represent specific measures you might use—and specific objectives that you might target—as part of a broader, overarching security design.

It's important to understand what these controls are and are not. They are not implementations. Any given control can be implemented in a myriad of different ways. For example, you might have a control specifying that any administrative access to production systems (and system components) must be logged and recorded. However, this control doesn't outline how you'd do that; instead, context, circumstances, and the organization itself will dictate how. For example, if access to the production system happens via a terminal (that is, a user at the keyboard), you might use the native logging...

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