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Security controls

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Security controls or security measures are safeguards or countermeasures to avoid, detect, counteract, or minimize security risks to physical property, information, computer systems, or other assets.[1] In the field of information security, such controls protect the confidentiality, integrity and availability of information.

Systems of controls can be referred to as frameworks or standards. Frameworks can enable an organization to manage security controls across different types of assets with consistency.

Types of security controls

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Security controls can be classified by various criteria. For example, controls can be classified by how/when/where they act relative to a security breach (sometimes termed control types):

  • Preventive controls are intended to prevent an incident from occurring e.g. by locking out unauthorized intruders;
  • Detective controls are intended to identify, characterize, and log an incident e.g. isolating suspicious behavior from a malicious actor on a network;[2]
  • Compensating controls mitigate ongoing damages of an active incident, e.g. shutting down a system upon detecting malware.
  • After the event, corrective controls are intended to restore damage caused by the incident e.g. by recovering the organization to normal working status as efficiently as possible.

Security controls can also be classified according to the implementation of the control (sometimes termed control categories), for example:

Information security standards and control frameworks

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Numerous information security standards promote good security practices and define frameworks or systems to structure the analysis and design for managing information security controls. Some of the most well known standards are outlined below.

International Standards Organization

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ISO/IEC 27001:2022 was released in October 2022. All organizations certified to ISO 27001:2013 are obliged to transition to the new version of the Standard within 3 years (by October 2025).

The 2022 version of the Standard specifies 93 controls in 4 groups:

  • A.5: Organisational controls
  • A.6: People controls
  • A.7: Physical controls
  • A.8: Technological controls

It groups these controls into operational capabilities as follows:

  • Governance
  • Asset management
  • Information protection
  • Human resource security
  • Physical security
  • System and network security
  • Application security
  • Secure configuration
  • Identity and access management
  • Threat and vulnerability management
  • Continuity
  • Supplier relationships security
  • Legal and compliance
  • Information security event management; and
  • Information_security_assurance

The previous version of the Standard, ISO/IEC 27001, specified 114 controls in 14 groups:

  • A.5: Information security policies
  • A.6: How information security is organised
  • A.7: Human resources security - controls that are applied before, during, or after employment.
  • A.8: Asset management
  • A.9: Access controls and managing user access
  • A.10: Cryptographic technology
  • A.11: Physical security of the organisation's sites and equipment
  • A.12: Operational security
  • A.13: Secure communications and data transfer
  • A.14: Secure acquisition, development, and support of information systems
  • A.15: Security for suppliers and third parties
  • A.16: Incident management
  • A.17: Business continuity/disaster recovery (to the extent that it affects information security)
  • A.18: Compliance - with internal requirements, such as policies, and with external requirements, such as laws.

U.S. Federal Government information security standards

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The Federal Information Processing Standards (FIPS) apply to all US government agencies. However, certain national security systems, under the purview of the Committee on National Security Systems, are managed outside these standards.

Federal information Processing Standard 200 (FIPS 200), "Minimum Security Requirements for Federal Information and Information Systems," specifies the minimum security controls for federal information systems and the processes by which risk-based selection of security controls occurs. The catalog of minimum security controls is found in NIST Special Publication SP 800-53.

FIPS 200 identifies 17 broad control families:

  • AC Access Control
  • AT Awareness and Training
  • AU Audit and Accountability
  • CA Security Assessment and Authorization (historical abbreviation)
  • CM Configuration Management
  • CP Contingency Planning
  • IA Identification and Authentication
  • IR Incident Response
  • MA Maintenance
  • MP Media Protection
  • PE Physical and Environmental Protection
  • PL Planning
  • PS Personnel Security
  • RA Risk Assessment
  • SA System and Services Acquisition
  • SC System and Communications Protection
  • SI System and Information Integrity

National Institute of Standards and Technology

NIST Cybersecurity Framework

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A maturity based framework divided into five functional areas and approximately 100 individual controls in its "core."

NIST SP-800-53

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A database of nearly one thousand technical controls grouped into families and cross references.

  • Starting with Revision 3 of 800-53, Program Management controls were identified. These controls are independent of the system controls, but are necessary for an effective security program.
  • Starting with Revision 4 of 800-53, eight families of privacy controls were identified to align the security controls with the privacy expectations of federal law.
  • Starting with Revision 5 of 800-53, the controls also address data privacy as defined by the NIST Data Privacy Framework.

Commercial Control Sets

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COBIT5

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A proprietary control set published by ISACA.[3]

  • Governance of Enterprise IT
    • Evaluate, Direct and Monitor (EDM) – 5 processes
  • Management of Enterprise IT
    • Align, Plan and Organise (APO) – 13 processes
    • Build, Acquire and Implement (BAI) – 10 processes
    • Deliver, Service and Support (DSS) – 6 processes
    • Monitor, Evaluate and Assess (MEA) - 3 processes

CIS Controls (CIS 18)

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Formerly known as the SANS Critical Security Controls now officially called the CIS Critical Security Controls (COS Controls).[4] The CIS Controls are divided into 18 controls.

  • CIS Control 1: Inventory and Control of Enterprise Assets
  • CIS Control 2: Inventory and Control of Software Assets
  • CIS Control 3: Data Protection
  • CIS Control 4: Secure Configuration of Enterprise Assets and Software
  • CIS Control 5: Account Management
  • CIS Control 6: Access Control Management
  • CIS Control 7: Continuous Vulnerability Management
  • CIS Control 8: Audit Log Management
  • CIS Control 9: Email and Web Browser Protections
  • CIS Control 10: Malware Defenses
  • CIS Control 11: Data Recovery
  • CIS Control 12: Network Infrastructure Management
  • CIS Control 13: Network Monitoring and Defense
  • CIS Control 14: Security Awareness and Skills Training
  • CIS Control 15: Service Provider Management
  • CIS Control 16: Application Software Security
  • CIS Control 17: Incident Response Management
  • CIS Control 18: Penetration Testing

The Controls are divided further into Implementation Groups (IGs) which are a recommended guidance to prioritize implementation of the CIS controls.[5]

Telecommunications

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In telecommunications, security controls are defined as security services as part of the OSI model:

  • ITU-T X.800 Recommendation.
  • ISO ISO 7498-2

These are technically aligned.[6][7] This model is widely recognized.[8] [9]

Data liability (legal, regulatory, compliance)

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The intersection of security risk and laws that set standards of care is where data liability are defined. A handful of databases are emerging to help risk managers research laws that define liability at the country, province/state, and local levels. In these control sets, compliance with relevant laws are the actual risk mitigators.

  • Perkins Coie Security Breach Notification Chart: A set of articles (one per state) that define data breach notification requirements among US states.[10]
  • NCSL Security Breach Notification Laws: A list of US state statutes that define data breach notification requirements.[11]
  • ts jurisdiction: A commercial cybersecurity research platform with coverage of 380+ US State & Federal laws that impact cybersecurity before and after a breach. ts jurisdiction also maps to the NIST Cybersecurity Framework.[12]

Business control frameworks

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There are a wide range of frameworks and standards looking at internal business, and inter-business controls, including:

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "What are Security Controls?". www.ibm.com. Retrieved 2020-10-31.
  2. ^ "Detective controls". AWS. Dec 12, 2022.
  3. ^ "COBIT Framework | Risk & Governance | Enterprise IT Management - ISACA". cobitonline.isaca.org. Retrieved 2020-03-18.
  4. ^ "The 18 CIS Controls". CIS. Retrieved 2022-11-08.
  5. ^ "CIS Critical Security Controls Implementation Groups". CIS. Retrieved 2022-11-08.
  6. ^ X.800 : Security architecture for Open Systems Interconnection for CCITT applications
  7. ^ ISO 7498-2 (Information processing systems – Open systems interconnection – Basic Reference Model – Part 2: Security architecture)
  8. ^ William Stallings Crittografia e sicurezza delle reti Seconda edizione ISBN 88-386-6377-7 Traduzione Italiana a cura di Luca Salgarelli di Cryptography and Network security 4 edition Pearson 2006
  9. ^ Securing information and communications systems: principles, technologies, and applications Steven Furnell, Sokratis Katsikas, Javier Lopez, Artech House, 2008 - 362 pages
  10. ^ "Security Breach Notification Chart". Perkins Coie. Retrieved 2020-03-18.
  11. ^ "Security Breach Notification Laws". www.ncsl.org. Retrieved 2020-03-18.
  12. ^ "ts jurisdiction". Threat Sketch. Retrieved 2020-03-18.
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