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Computer Security: Principles and Practice

Computer Security: Principles and Practice. Chapter 13 – Physical and Infrastructure Security. First Edition by William Stallings and Lawrie Brown Lecture slides by Lawrie Brown. Physical and Infrastructure Security. now consider physical / premises security

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Computer Security: Principles and Practice

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  1. Computer Security: Principles and Practice Chapter 13 – Physical and Infrastructure Security First Edition by William Stallings and Lawrie Brown Lecture slides by Lawrie Brown

  2. Physical and Infrastructure Security • now consider physical / premises security • three elements of info system security: • logical security - protect computer data • physical security - protect systems & access • premises security - protect people / property

  3. Physical Security • protect physical assets that support the storage and processing of information • involves two complementary requirements: • prevent damage to physical infrastructure • information system hardware • physical facility • supporting facilities • personnel • prevent physical infrastructure misuse leading to misuse / damage of protected information

  4. Physical Security Context

  5. Physical Security Threats • look at physical situations / occurrences that threaten information systems: • environmental threats (incl. natural disasters) • technical threats • human-caused threats • first consider natural disasters

  6. Natural Disasters • tornado • hurricane • earthquake • ice storm / blizzard • lightning • flood

  7. Environmental Threats • inappropriate temperature and humidity • fire and smoke • water • chemical, radiological, biological hazards • dust • infestation

  8. Technical Threats • electrical power is essential to run equipment • power utility problems: • under-voltage - dips/brownouts/outages, interrupt service • over-voltage - surges/faults/lightening, can destroy chips • noise - on power lines, may interfere with device operation • electromagnetic interference (EMI) • from line noise, motors, fans, heavy equipment, other computers, nearby radio stations & microwave relays • can cause intermittent problems with computers

  9. Human-Caused Threats • less predictable, may be targeted, harder to deal with • include: • unauthorized physical access • leading to other threats • theft of equipment / data • vandalism of equipment / data • misuse of resources

  10. Mitigation MeasuresEnvironmental Threats • inappropriate temperature and humidity • environmental control equipment, power • fire and smoke • alarms, preventative measures, fire mitigation • smoke detectors, no smoking • water • manage lines, equipment location, cutoff sensors • other threats • appropriate technical counter-measures, limit dust entry, pest control

  11. Mitigation MeasuresTechnical Threats • electrical power for critical equipment use • use uninterruptible power supply (UPS) • emergency power generator • electromagnetic interference (EMI) • filters and shielding

  12. Mitigation MeasuresHuman-Caused Threats • physical access control • IT equipment, wiring, power, comms, media • have a spectrum of approaches • restrict building access, locked area, secured, power switch secured, tracking device • also need intruder sensors / alarms

  13. Recovery from Physical Security Breaches • redundancy • to provide recovery from loss of data • ideally off-site, updated as often as feasible • can use batch encrypted remote backup • extreme is remote hot-site with live data • physical equipment damage recovery • depends on nature of damage and cleanup • may need disaster recovery specialists

  14. Threat Assessment • set up a steering committee • obtain information and assistance • identify all possible threats • determine the likelihood of each threat • approximate the direct costs • consider cascading costs • prioritize the threats • complete the threat assessment report

  15. Planning and Implementation • after assessment then develop a plan for threat prevention, mitigation, recovery • typical steps: • assess internal and external resources • identify challenges and prioritize activities • develop a plan • implement the plan

  16. Example Policy

  17. Physical / Logical Security Integration • have many detection / prevention devices • more effective if have central control • hence desire to integrate physical and logical security, esp access control • need standards in this area • FIPS 201-1 “Personal Identity Verification (PIV) of Federal Employees and Contractors”

  18. Personal Identity Verification

  19. PIV Convergence

  20. Summary • introduced physical security issues • threats: environmental,technical, human • mitigation measures and recovery • assessment, planning, implementation • physical / logical security integration

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