NIST INFORMATION SECURITY - Managing Information Security Risk Organization, Mission, and Information System View Buy on Amazon
Facebook LinkedIn

NIST INFORMATION SECURITY - Managing Information Security Risk Organization, Mission, and Information System View

Author U.S. NIST
Publisher U.S. NIST
Book Details
Author(s) U.S. NIST
Publisher U.S. NIST
ISBN / ASIN B00H3I1ZBA
ISBN-13 978B00H3I1ZB0
Sales Rank #2,167,067
Marketplace United States 🇺🇸
Description
Information technology is widely recognized as the engine that drives the U.S. economy,
giving industry a competitive advantage in global markets, enabling the federal government
to provide better services to its citizens, and facilitating greater productivity as a nation. Organizations5 in the public and private sectors depend on technology-intensive information systems6 to successfully carry out their missions and business functions. Information systems can include diverse entities ranging from high-end supercomputers, workstations, personal computers, cellular telephones, and personal digital assistants to very specialized systems (e.g., weapons systems, telecommunications systems, industrial/process control systems, and environmental control systems). Information systems are subject to serious threats that can have adverse effects on organizational operations (i.e., missions, functions, image, or reputation), organizational assets, individuals, other organizations, and the Nation by exploiting both known and unknown vulnerabilities to compromise the confidentiality, integrity, or availability of the information being processed, stored, or transmitted by those systems. Threats to information and information systems can include purposeful attacks, environmental disruptions, and human/machine errors and result in great harm to the national and economic security interests of the United States. Therefore, it is imperative that leaders and managers at all levels understand their responsibilities and are held accountable for managing information security risk—that is, the risk associated with the operation and use of information systems that support the missions and business functions of their organizations.

Organizational risk can include many types of risk (e.g., program management risk, investment risk, budgetary risk, legal liability risk, safety risk, inventory risk, supply chain risk, and security risk). Security risk related to the operation and use of information systems is just one of many components of organizational risk that senior leaders/executives address as part of their ongoing risk management responsibilities. Effective risk management requires that organizations operate in highly complex, interconnected environments using state-of-the-art and legacy information systems—systems that organizations depend on to accomplish their missions and to conduct important business-related functions. Leaders must recognize that explicit, well-informed risk-based decisions are necessary in order to balance the benefits gained from the operation and use of these information systems with the risk of the same systems being vehicles through which purposeful attacks, environmental disruptions, or human errors cause mission or business failure. Managing information security risk, like risk management in general, is not an exact science. It brings together the best collective judgments of individuals and groups within organizations responsible for strategic planning, oversight, management, and day-to-day operations—providing both the necessary and sufficient risk response measures to adequately protect the missions and business functions of those organizations.
Donate to EbookNetworking
No Prev
No Next