The myths of security : what the computer security industry doesn't want you to know / John Viega.

By: Viega, John [author]
Material type: TextTextLanguage: İngilizce Publisher: Beijing ; Cambridge ; Sebastopol, CA : O'Reilly, [2009]Copyright date: ©2009Edition: First editionDescription: xix, 238 pages : illustrations ; 22 cmContent type: text Media type: unmediated Carrier type: volumeISBN: 9780596523022 (pbk.); 0596523025 (pbk.)Subject(s): Data protection | Computer security | Internet industry -- Security measuresLOC classification: QA76.9.A25 | V55 2009
Contents:
The security industry is broken -- Security : nobody cares! -- It's easier to get "owned" than you think -- It's good to be bad -- Test of a good security product : would I use it? -- Why Microsoft's free AV won't matter -- Google is evil -- Why most AV doesn't work (well) -- Why AV is often slow -- Four minutes to infection? -- Personal firewall problems -- Call it "antivirus" -- Why most people shouldn't run intrusion prevention systems -- Problems with host intrusion prevention -- Plenty of phish in the sea -- The cult of Schneier -- Helping others stay safe on the Internet -- Snake oil : legitimate vendors sell it, too -- Living in fear? -- Is Apple really more secure? -- OK, your mobile phone is insecure; should you care? -- Do AV vendors write their own viruses? -- One simple fix for the AV industry -- Open source security : a red herring -- Why SiteAdvisor was such a good idea -- Is there anything we can do about identity theft? -- Virtualization : host security's silver bullet? -- When will we get rid of all the security vulnerabilities? -- Application security on a budget -- "Responsible disclosure" isn't responsible -- Are man-in-the-middle attacks a myth? -- An attack on PKI -- HTTPS sucks : let's kill it! -- CrAP-TCHA and the usability/security tradeoff -- No death for the password -- Spam is dead -- Improving authentication -- Cloud insecurity? -- What AV companies should be doing (AV 2.0) -- VPNs usually decrease security -- Usability and security -- Privacy -- Anonymity -- Improving patch management -- An open security industry -- Academics -- Locksmithing -- Critical infrastructure.
Summary: If you think computer security has improved in recent years, Myths of Security will shake you out of your complacency. Longtime security professional John Viega reports on the sorry state of security, with concrete suggestions for professionals and individuals confronting the issue. Provocative, insightful, and often controversial, The Myths of Security addresses IT professionals who deal with security issues, and speaks to Mac and PC users who spend time online.
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Genel Koleksiyon QA76.9.A25 V55 2009 (Browse shelf) Available Donated by Kemal Bıçakçı 0060331

The security industry is broken -- Security : nobody cares! -- It's easier to get "owned" than you think -- It's good to be bad -- Test of a good security product : would I use it? -- Why Microsoft's free AV won't matter -- Google is evil -- Why most AV doesn't work (well) -- Why AV is often slow -- Four minutes to infection? -- Personal firewall problems -- Call it "antivirus" -- Why most people shouldn't run intrusion prevention systems -- Problems with host intrusion prevention -- Plenty of phish in the sea -- The cult of Schneier -- Helping others stay safe on the Internet -- Snake oil : legitimate vendors sell it, too -- Living in fear? -- Is Apple really more secure? -- OK, your mobile phone is insecure; should you care? -- Do AV vendors write their own viruses? -- One simple fix for the AV industry -- Open source security : a red herring -- Why SiteAdvisor was such a good idea -- Is there anything we can do about identity theft? -- Virtualization : host security's silver bullet? -- When will we get rid of all the security vulnerabilities? -- Application security on a budget -- "Responsible disclosure" isn't responsible -- Are man-in-the-middle attacks a myth? -- An attack on PKI -- HTTPS sucks : let's kill it! -- CrAP-TCHA and the usability/security tradeoff -- No death for the password -- Spam is dead -- Improving authentication -- Cloud insecurity? -- What AV companies should be doing (AV 2.0) -- VPNs usually decrease security -- Usability and security -- Privacy -- Anonymity -- Improving patch management -- An open security industry -- Academics -- Locksmithing -- Critical infrastructure.

If you think computer security has improved in recent years, Myths of Security will shake you out of your complacency. Longtime security professional John Viega reports on the sorry state of security, with concrete suggestions for professionals and individuals confronting the issue. Provocative, insightful, and often controversial, The Myths of Security addresses IT professionals who deal with security issues, and speaks to Mac and PC users who spend time online.

Donated by Kemal Bıçakçı

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