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Theoretical Cybersecurity

Principles and Advanced Concepts
BuchKartoniert, Paperback
213 Seiten
Englisch
Springererschienen am13.07.20221st ed.
There is a distinct lack of theoretical innovation in the cybersecurity industry. This is not to say that innovation is lacking, as new technologies, services, and solutions (as well as buzzwords) are emerging every day. This book will be the first cybersecurity text aimed at encouraging abstract and intellectual exploration of cybersecurity from the philosophical and speculative perspective. Technological innovation is certainly necessary, as it furthers the purveying of goods and services for cybersecurity producers in addition to securing the attack surface of cybersecurity consumers where able. The issue is that the industry, sector, and even academia are largely technologically focused. There is not enough work done to further the trade-the craft of cybersecurity. This book frames the cause of this and other issues, and what can be done about them. Potential methods and directions are outlined regarding how the industry can evolve to embrace theoretical cybersecurity innovation as it pertains to the art, as much as to the science. To do this, a taxonomy of the cybersecurity body of work is laid out to identify how the influences of the industry´s past and present constrain future innovation. Then, cost-benefit analysis and right-sizing of cybersecurity roles and responsibilities-as well as defensible experimentation concepts-are presented as the foundation for moving beyond some of those constraining factors that limit theoretical cybersecurity innovation. Lastly, examples and case studies demonstrate future-oriented topics for cybersecurity theorization such as game theory, infinite-minded methodologies, and strategic cybersecurity implementations.What you´ll learnThe current state of the cybersecurity sector and how it constrains theoretical innovation How to understand attacker and defender cost benefit The detect, prevent, and accept paradigmHow to build your own cybersecurity boxSupporting cybersecurity innovation through defensible experimentationHow to implement strategic cybersecurityInfinite vs finite game play in cybersecurity Who This Book Is ForThis book is for both practitioners of cybersecurity and those who are required to, or choose to, employ such services, technology, or capabilities.mehr
Verfügbare Formate
BuchKartoniert, Paperback
EUR58,84
E-BookPDF1 - PDF WatermarkE-Book
EUR56,99

Produkt

KlappentextThere is a distinct lack of theoretical innovation in the cybersecurity industry. This is not to say that innovation is lacking, as new technologies, services, and solutions (as well as buzzwords) are emerging every day. This book will be the first cybersecurity text aimed at encouraging abstract and intellectual exploration of cybersecurity from the philosophical and speculative perspective. Technological innovation is certainly necessary, as it furthers the purveying of goods and services for cybersecurity producers in addition to securing the attack surface of cybersecurity consumers where able. The issue is that the industry, sector, and even academia are largely technologically focused. There is not enough work done to further the trade-the craft of cybersecurity. This book frames the cause of this and other issues, and what can be done about them. Potential methods and directions are outlined regarding how the industry can evolve to embrace theoretical cybersecurity innovation as it pertains to the art, as much as to the science. To do this, a taxonomy of the cybersecurity body of work is laid out to identify how the influences of the industry´s past and present constrain future innovation. Then, cost-benefit analysis and right-sizing of cybersecurity roles and responsibilities-as well as defensible experimentation concepts-are presented as the foundation for moving beyond some of those constraining factors that limit theoretical cybersecurity innovation. Lastly, examples and case studies demonstrate future-oriented topics for cybersecurity theorization such as game theory, infinite-minded methodologies, and strategic cybersecurity implementations.What you´ll learnThe current state of the cybersecurity sector and how it constrains theoretical innovation How to understand attacker and defender cost benefit The detect, prevent, and accept paradigmHow to build your own cybersecurity boxSupporting cybersecurity innovation through defensible experimentationHow to implement strategic cybersecurityInfinite vs finite game play in cybersecurity Who This Book Is ForThis book is for both practitioners of cybersecurity and those who are required to, or choose to, employ such services, technology, or capabilities.
Details
ISBN/GTIN978-1-4842-8299-1
ProduktartBuch
EinbandartKartoniert, Paperback
Verlag
Erscheinungsjahr2022
Erscheinungsdatum13.07.2022
Auflage1st ed.
Seiten213 Seiten
SpracheEnglisch
IllustrationenXVI, 213 p. 58 illus.
Artikel-Nr.50909551

Inhalt/Kritik

Inhaltsverzeichnis
Chapter 1. Introduction.- Chapter 2. A Cyber Taxonomy.- Chapter 3. Cost Benefit.- Chapter 4. Roles and Responsibilities.- Chapter 5. Experimentation.- Chapter 6. Strategic Cybersecurity.- Chapter 7. Strategic Defensive Security.- Chapter 8. Infinite Cybersecurity.- Chapter 9. Cybersecurity and Game Theory.- Chapter 10. Game Theory Case Study: Ransomware.mehr

Autor

Dr. Jacob G. Oakley spent over seven years in the U.S. Marines and was one of the founding members of the operational arm of Marine Corps Forces Cyberspace Command at Ft. Meade, Maryland, leaving that unit as the senior Marine Corps operator and a division technical lead. After his enlistment he wrote and taught an advanced computer operations course, eventually returning back to mission support at Ft. Meade. He later left government contracting to do threat emulation and red teaming at a private company for commercial clients, serving as principal penetration tester and director of penetration testing & cyber operations. He is currently working as a Cyber SME for a government customer. He completed his doctorate in IT at Towson University researching and developing offensive cybersecurity methods and is the author of Professional Red Teaming: Conducting Successful Cybersecurity Engagements as well as Waging Cyber War: Technical Challenges and Operational Constraints.