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A CISO Guide to Cyber Resilience

You're reading from   A CISO Guide to Cyber Resilience A how-to guide for every CISO to build a resilient security program

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Product type Paperback
Published in Apr 2024
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781835466926
Length 238 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Debra Baker Debra Baker
Author Profile Icon Debra Baker
Debra Baker
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Toc

Table of Contents (20) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Part 1: Attack on BigCo FREE CHAPTER
2. Chapter 1: The Attack on BigCo 3. Part 2: Security Resilience: Getting the Basics Down
4. Chapter 2: Identity and Access Management 5. Chapter 3: Security Policies 6. Chapter 4: Security and Risk Management 7. Chapter 5: Securing Your Endpoints 8. Chapter 6: Data Safeguarding 9. Chapter 7: Security Awareness Culture 10. Chapter 8: Vulnerability Management 11. Chapter 9: Asset Inventory 12. Chapter 10: Data Protection 13. Part 3: Security Resilience: Taking Your Security Program to the Next Level
14. Chapter 11: Taking Your Endpoint Security to the Next Level 15. Chapter 12: Secure Configuration Baseline 16. Chapter 13: Classify Your Data and Assets 17. Chapter 14: Cyber Resilience in the Age of Artificial Intelligence (AI) 18. Index 19. Other Books You May Enjoy

Security baseline

A security baseline involves essentially configuring your laptops, servers, cloud assets, and network devices according to specific controls. For example, all users must have a 14-character password. The parameters include at least one special character, a number, and upper- and lower-case characters. The strongest passwords to use are covered in Chapter 2. Password complexity and length are considered configurations. What makes a security baseline is when a new laptop, server, or cloud asset is built to have a base image with the specific controls already configured. In this way, every new Windows laptop and Macbook are built the same, with the same controls enforced for every new laptop issued by your company. Every type of asset your company has should have an associated security baseline. You should start with your network devices, user laptops, and critical servers. Another example is that your firewalls need to be configured with deny/all by default, which means...

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