IS 303 Chapter 4
Tools to prevent information misuse:
- Information Secrecy - Information Governance - Information Management - Information Compliance - Information Property
Information security
- a broad term encompassing the protection of information from accidental or intentional misuse by persons inside or outside an organization
Nonrepudiation
- a contractual stipulation to ensure that ebusiness participants do not deny their online actions
Smart card
- a device about the size of a credit card, containing embedded technologies that can store information and small amounts of software to perform some limited processing
Ransomware
- a form of malicious software that infects your computer and asks for money
Pretexting
- a form of social engineering in which one individual lies to obtain confidential data about another individual
Spam
- a form of unsolicited email
Authentication
- a method for confirming users' identities
Information governance
- a method or system of government for information management or control
Privilege Escalation
- a network intrusion attack that takes advantage of programming errors or design flaws to grant the attacker elevated access to the network and its associated data and applications
Sniffer
- a program or device that can monitor data traveling over a network
Spyware
- a special class of adware that collects data about the user and transmits it over the Internet without the user's knowledge or permission
Phishing
- a technique to gain personal information for the purpose of identity theft, usually by means of fraudulent e-mail
Scareware
- a type of malware that's downloaded onto your computer and that tries to convince you that your computer is infected with a virus or other type of malware.
Information property
- an ethical issue that focuses on who owns information about individuals and how information can be sold and exchanged
Personally Identifiable Information (PII)
- any data that can be used to identify, locate, or contact an individual
Nonsensitive PII
- is information transmitted without encryption and includes information collected from public records, phone books, corporate directories, websites, etc.
Organizational information
- is intellectual capital- it must be protected
Adware
- is software that, although purporting to serve some useful function and often fulfilling that function, also allows Internet advertisers to display advertisements without the consent of the computer user.
Insiders
- legitimate users who purposely or accidentally misuse their access to the environment and cause some kind of business-affecting incident
Backdoor programs
- open a way into the network for future attacks
Dumpster diving
- or looking through people's trash, is another way hackers obtain information.
Social media policy
- outlining the corporate guidelines or principles governing employee online communications
Content filtering
- prevents emails containing sensitive information from transmitting and stops spam and viruses from spreading
Downtime
- refers to a period of time when a system is unavailable
Acceptable Use Policy (AUP)
- requires a user to agree to follow it to be provided access to corporate email, information systems, and the Internet
Pharming
- reroutes requests for legitimate websites to false websites
Cyberterrorists
- seek to cause harm to people or to destroy critical systems or information and use the internet as a weapon of mass destruction
Tokens
- small electronic devices that change user passwords automatically
Malware
- software that is intended to damage or disable computers and computer systems.
Virus
- software written with malicious intent to cause annoyance or damage
Worm
- spreads itself not only from file to file but also from computer to computer
Employee monitoring policy
- stating explicitly how, when, and where the company monitors its employees
Information compliance
- the act of conforming, acquiescing, or yielding information
Confidentiality
- the assurance that messages and information are available only to those who are authorized to view them
Information secrecy
- the category of computer security that addresses the protection of data from unauthorized disclosure and confirmation of data source authenticity
Biometrics
- the identification of a user based on a physical characteristic, such as a fingerprint, iris, face, voice, or handwriting
Astroturfing
- the practice of artificially stimulating online conversation and positive reviews about a product
ethics
- the principles and standards that guide our behavior toward other people
Authorization
- the process of giving someone permission to do or have something
Privacy
- the right to be left alone when you want to be, to have control over your own personal possessions, and not to be observed without your consent
Sock puppet marketing
- the use of a false identity to artificially stimulate demand for a product, brand or service
Workplace MIS monitoring
- tracks people's activities by such measures as number of keystrokes, error rate, and number of transactions processed
White-hat hackers
- work at the request of the system owners to find system vulnerabilities and plug the holes
Sensitive PII
- is information transmitted with encryption and, when disclosed, results in a breach of an individual's privacy and can potentially cause the individual harm
Splogs (spam blogs)
- are fake blogs created solely to raise the search engine rank of affiliated websites. Even blogs that are legitimate are plagued by spam, with spammers taking advantage of the Comment feature of most blogs to comments with links to spam sites.
Hoaxes
- attack computer systems by transmitting a virus hoax, with a real virus attached
Vertical privilege escalation
- attackers grant themselves a higher access level such as administrator, allowing the attacker to perform illegal actions such as running unauthorized code or deleting data
Horizontal privilege escalation
- attackers grant themselves the same access levels they already have but assume the identity of another user
Distributed denial-of-service attack (DDoS)
- attacks from multiple computers that flood a website with so many requests for service that it slows down or crashes. A common type is the Ping of Death, in which thousands of computers try to access a website at the same time, overloading it and shutting it down.
Common types of hackers:
- black-hat hackers - crackers - cyberterrorists - hactivists - script kiddies - white-hat hackers
Black-hat hackers
- break into other people's computer systems and may just look around or may steal and destroy information
Polymorphic viruses and worms
- change their form as they propagate
Packet tampering
- consists of altering the contents of packets as they travel over the internet or altering data on computer disks after penetrating a network
Identity theft
- consists of forging someone's identity for the purpose of fraud
Spoofing
- consists of forging the return address on an email so that the message appears to come from someone other than the actual sender
Information privacy policy
- contains general principles regarding information privacy - the unethical use of information happens not through the malicious scheming of a rogue marketer but, rather, unintentionally
Ethical computer use policy
- contains general principles to guide computer user behavior - the users should be informed by the rules and, by agreeing to use the system on that basis, consent to abide by them
Internet use policy
- contains general principles to guide the proper use of the internet
Information security plan
- details how an organization will implement the information security policies
Email privacy policy
- details the extent to which email messages may be read by others - companies can mitigate many of the risks of using electronic messaging systems by implementing and adhering to an email privacy policy
Organizations strive to build a corporate culture based on ethical principles that employees can understand and implement:
- ethical computer use - information privacy policy - acceptable use policy - email privacy policy - social media policy - workplace monitoring policy
Information management
- examines the organizational resource of information and regulates its definitions, uses, value, and distribution ensuring it has the types of data/information required to function and grow effectively
Hacker
- experts in technology who use their knowledge to break into computers and computer networks, either for profit or just motivated by the challenge
Intrusion detection software (IDS)
- features full-time monitoring tools that search for patterns in network traffic to identify intruders
Script kiddies
- find hacking code on the internet and click-and-point their way into systems to cause damage or spread viruses
Denial-of-service attack (DoS)
- floods a website with so many requests for service that it slows down or crashes the site
Information ethics
- govern the ethical and moral issues arising from the development and use of information technologies, as well as the creation, collection, duplication, distribution, and processing of information itself
Social engineering
- hackers use their social skills to trick people into revealing access credentials or other valuable information
Crackers
- have criminal intent when hacking
Hacktivists
- have philosophical and political reasons for breaking into systems and will often deface the website as a protest
Trojan-horse virus
- hides inside other software, usually as an attachment or a downloadable file
Information security policies
- identify the rules required to maintain information security, such as requiring users to log off before leaving for lunch or meetings, never sharing passwords with anyone, and changing passwords every 30 days
Malicious code
- includes a variety of threats such as viruses, worms, and Trojan horses
The first line of defense an organization should follow to help combat insider issues to develop information security policies and an information security plan:
- information security policies - information security plan
The biggest issue surrounding information security is not a technical issue, but a people issue:
- insiders - social engineering - dumpster diving - pretexting
Intellectual property
- intangible creative work that is embodied in physical form and includes copyrights, trademarks, and patents
Firewall
- is a hardware and/or software that guards a private network by analyzing the information leaving and entering the network
Elevation of Privilege (EoP)
- is a process by which a user misleads a system into granting unauthorized rights, usually for the purpose of compromising or destroying the system
The most secure type of authentication involves:
1) something user knows (most common and ineffective) ID and password 2) something user has -- chips on credit cards 3) something that is part of the user --fingerprint
Technologies available to help prevent and build resistance to attacks include:
1. Content filtering 2. Encryption 3. Firewall
Three areas of information security:
1. People (Authentication and Authorization) 2. Data (Prevention and Resistance) 3. Attacks (Detection and Response)
Business issues related to information ethics:
1. intellectual property 2. copyright 3. pirated software 4. counterfeit software 5. digital rights management
Security threats to Ebusiness include:
Elevation of privilege Hoaxes Malicious code Packet tampering Sniffer Spoofing Splogs Spyware