Security is the condition of being protected against danger or loss. In the general sense, security is a concept similar to
safety. The nuance between the two is an added emphasis on being protected from dangers that originate from outside. Individuals or actions that encroach upon the condition of protection are responsible for the breach of security.
The word "security" in general usage is synonymous with "safety," but as a technical term "security" means that something not only
is secure but that it
has been secured. In
telecommunications, the term
security has the following meanings:
- A condition that results from the establishment and maintenance of protective measures that ensure a state of inviolability from hostile acts or influences.
- With respect to classified matter, the condition that prevents unauthorized persons from having access to official information that's safeguarded in the interests of national security.
- Measures taken by a military unit, an activity or installation to protect itself against all acts designed to, or which may, impair its effectiveness.
Security has to be compared and contrasted with other related concepts:
Safety,,
reliability. The key difference between security and reliability is that security must take into account the actions of active malicious agents attempting to cause destruction.
Perceived security compared to real security
It is very often true that people's perception of security isn't directly related to actual security. For example, a fear of flying is much more common than a fear of driving; however, driving is generally a much more dangerous form of transport. The tool may be mistaken for the effect, for example when multiple
computer security programs interfere with each other, so the user assumes the computer is secure when actual security has vanished.
Another side of this is a phenomenon called
security theatre where ineffective security measures such as screening of airline passengers based on static databases are introduced with little real increase in security or even, according to the critics of one such measure -
Computer Assisted Passenger Prescreening System - with an actual
decrease in real security.
Categorising security
There is an immense literature on the analysis and categorisation of security. Part of the reason for this is that, in most security systems, the "weakest link in the chain" is the most important. The situation is asymmetric since the
defender must cover all points of attack while the attacker need only identify a single weak point upon which to concentrate.
Types of security
IT realm
Computing security
Data security
Application security
Information security
Network security
Physical realm
Physical security
Shopping centre security
Airport security
Food security
Home security
Political
International security
National security
Human security
Monetary
Financial security
Security concepts
Certain concepts recur throughout different fields of security.
Risk - a risk is a possible event which could cause a loss
threat - a threat is a method of triggering a risk event that's dangerous
Countermeasure - a countermeasure is a way to stop a threat from triggering a risk event
Defense in depth - never rely on one single security measure alone
Assurance - assurance is the level of guarantee that a security system will behave as expected
IT Security standards
ISO/IEC 15443 A framework for IT security assurance (covering many methods, for example TCSEC, Common Criteria, ISO/IEC 17799)
ISO/IEC 15408
refer also to Common Criteria
ISO/IEC 17799:2005 Code of practice for information security management
refer also to ISO/IEC 17799
refer also to TCSEC Trusted Computer System Evaluation Criteria (Orange Book)
Security experts
Richard A. Clarke
David H. Holtzman
Bruce Schneier
External results
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