Government Documents, Laws, Testimonies or Reports; Cybersecurity Policy; and Security Metrics

Guide for Developing Performance Metrics for Information Security: Recommendations of the National Institute of Standards and Technology

Added by the EDUCAUSE Librarian
Title:Guide for Developing Performance Metrics for Information Security: Recommendations of the National Institute of Standards and Technology (ID: CSD5073)
Author(s):Alicia Clay-Jones (National Institute of Standards and Technology), Anothony Brown (National Institute of Standards and Technology), Elizabeth Chew (National Institute of Standards and Technology), Joan Hash (National Institute of Standards and Technology), and Nadya Bartol (National Institute of Standards and Technology)
Origin:Contributed by Organizations or Campuses (05/19/2006)
Type:Government Documents, Laws, Testimonies or Reports
Abstract:

This publication focuses on developing and implementing information security metrics for an information security program. The processes and methodologies described in this guidance link information security performance to agency performance by leveraging agency-level strategic planning processes. The performance metrics developed according to this guide will enhance the ability of agencies to respond to a variety of federal government mandates and initiatives, including the Federal Information Security Management Act (FISMA) and the President's Management Agenda (PMA).

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Corporate Information Security Working Group:

Added by the EDUCAUSE Librarian
Title:Corporate Information Security Working Group: (ID: CSD3661)
Origin:Contributed by the Security Task Force (2004)
Type:Government Documents, Laws, Testimonies or Reports
Abstract:

The Corporate Information Security Working Group (CISWG) was originally convened in November 2003 by Representative Adam Putnam (R-FL). The Best Practices team surveyed available information security guidance. It concluded in its March 2004 report that much of this guidance is expressed at a relatively high level of abstraction and is therefore not immediately useful as actionable guidance without significant and often costly elaboration. In a subsequent phase convened in June 2004, the Best Practices and Metrics teams was charged with refining Information Security Program Elements and developing recommended Metrics supporting each of the elements. This report is the result of that effort and represents a resource that will help Board members, managers, and technical staff establish their own comprehensive structure of principles, policies, processes, controls, and performance metrics to support the people, process, and technology aspects of information security.

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