<p><P>The ease of access, relative anonymity, and borderless nature of the Internet has allowed widespread computer-based crime β or cybercrime β to proliferate rapidly. Law enforcement and international security organizations, along with governments and the private sector, have only recently begun
Global Initiatives to Secure Cyberspace: An Emerging Landscape
β Scribed by Michael Portnoy, Seymour Goodman (auth.), Michael Portnoy, Seymour Goodman (eds.)
- Publisher
- Springer US
- Year
- 2009
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 166
- Series
- Advances in Information Security 42
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
The ease of access, relative anonymity, and borderless nature of the Internet has allowed widespread computer-based crime β or cybercrime β to proliferate rapidly. Law enforcement and international security organizations, along with governments and the private sector, have only recently begun to appreciate the scope, severity and transnational nature of this problem. In recent years, organizations have begun to emerge and evolve in a progressively collaborative ecosystem of vested international bodies seeking to address these challenges in unique, innovative ways.
This study attempts to address a series of questions regarding the current state of cyber security. What does the international landscape of cyber security look like today? What are these organizations actually doing? Are they succeeding? What measureable progress has been made in developing a supportive ecosystem of global cyber security? Are these organizations presenting practical, innovative, collaborative, and sustainable solutions to address these issues?
Global Initiatives to Secure Cyberspace: An Emerging Landscape is designed for a professional audience composed of researchers, practitioners and the government, focusing on a secure cyberspace industry. Advanced-level students in computer science will also find this book suitable.
β¦ Table of Contents
Front Matter....Pages 1-8
The International Landscape of Cyber Security....Pages 1-3
A Brief History of Global Responses to Cyber Threats....Pages 1-6
International Intergovernmental Organizations....Pages 1-22
Regional Intergovernmental Organizations....Pages 1-31
Private-Public and Non-Governmental Organizations (NGOs)....Pages 1-32
Making global cyberspace more secure�....Pages 1-5
Back Matter....Pages 1-58
β¦ Subjects
Systems and Data Security; Computer Communication Networks; Data Encryption; Information Systems Applications (incl.Internet); Data Structures, Cryptology and Information Theory; Computer Systems Organization and Communication Networks
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
The ease of access, relative anonymity, and borderless nature of the Internet has allowed widespread computer-based crime β or cybercrime β to proliferate rapidly. Law enforcement and international security organizations, along with governments and the private sector, have only recently begun to app
<p>This book explores the concept of cyberplace as a mode of inhabiting the contemporary world. As a result, it suggests that, for many communities, unlocking cyberspace and inhabiting cyberplaces is now an integral part of their coming-to-the-globalised-world. <br>Boos reviews in the detail the exi
This publication is the result of the analyses and discussions conducted by the Energy Security Forum on the global dimensions of emerging energy security risks facing UNECE member States. It presents global energy security risks from three different points of view: the European Union, the Russian F
How is knowledge produced and used in cyberspace? David Hakken - a key figure in the anthropology of science and technology studies - approaches the study of cyberculture through the venue of knowledge production, drawing on critical theory from anthropology, philosophy and informatics (computer sci