Cybersecurity Domains: Security Engineering and Responding to Incidents
The following forums may help construct and facilitate parts of your executive summary assignment. There are many cybersecurity domains that should be considered concerning your cybersecurity technology topic. These domains can include:
Information Security
Asset Security
Policies Procedures
Communications and Networking
Access and Identity Management
Security Operations
Assessment and Testing
Security Engineering
Responding to Incidents
Business Continuity and Disaster Recovery
Laws, Regulations, and Compliance
Software Development
For many reasons, risk assessment and the management of risk is important to managers. Please choose another security domain above and relate it specifically to your topic. Security Engineering and Preventing/Responding to Incidents are very important cybersecurity domains. For example, planning, designing, and implementing robust systems that enhance cybersecurity are often based on best practices and an associated cybersecurity framework. In addition, preventing and responding to breaches (e.g., ransomware), are critical to an organization’s going concern. Moreover, identifying risk and the management of risk associated with Security Engineering and Preventing/Responding to Incidents are issues that must be addressed by management in many corporations or non-public entities.
1. Explain from a managerial standpoint, why Security Engineering and Preventing/Responding to Incidents are important to an entity (public or private) and to its stakeholders?
2. Why is risk management critical concerning Security Engineering and Preventing/Responding to Incidents domains?
3. What critical items would a manager need to know concerning the Security Engineering and Preventing/Responding to Incidents domains?
Guidelines
Each student should discuss the relevance of your topic to these domains. Your posting needs to add value and you could relate your topic to a particular cybersecurity framework. Please support your positions with references, citations, and other supporting and analytical data/information (e.g., Charts, tables, etc.). Use prior textbooks and Internet Sources when necessary.