From the course: CompTIA Security+ (SY0-701) Cert Prep
Business continuity planning
From the course: CompTIA Security+ (SY0-701) Cert Prep
Business continuity planning
- [Instructor] Business Continuity Planning is one of the core responsibilities of the cybersecurity profession. Business continuity efforts are a collection of activities designed to keep a business running in the face of adversity, and this adversity may come in the form of a small-scale incident, such as a single-system failure or a catastrophic incident, such as an earthquake or tornado. The focus of business continuity is keeping operations running, and because of this, business continuity planning is sometimes referred to as continuity of operations planning or COOP. While many organizations place responsibility for business continuity with operational engineering teams, business continuity is a core security concept, because it's the primary control that supports the security objective of availability. Remember, that's one of the big three objectives of information, security, confidentiality, integrity, and availability. When an organization begins a business continuity effort, it's easy to quickly become overwhelmed by the many possible scenarios and controls that the project must consider. For this reason, the team developing a business continuity plan should take the time upfront to carefully define their scope. They should answer questions like, "What business activities will be covered by the plan? What type of systems will the plan cover and what types of controls will it consider?" The answers to these questions will help make critical prioritization decisions down the road. Continuity planners use a tool known as a Business Impact Assessment or BIA, to help make these decisions. The BIA is a risk assessment that uses a quantitative or a qualitative process. It begins by identifying the organization's mission-essential functions, and then traces those backwards to identify the critical IT systems that support those processes. Once planners have identified the affected IT systems, they then identify the potential risks to those systems, and conduct their risk assessment. The output of a business impact assessment is a prioritized listing of risks that might disrupt the organization's business, such as the one shown here. Planners can use this information to help select controls that mitigate the risks facing the organization, within acceptable expense limits. For example, notice the risks in this scenario are listed in descending order of expected loss. It makes sense to place the highest priority on addressing the risk at the top of the list, hurricane damage to a data center, but the organization must then make decisions about control implementation that factor in cost. For example, if a $50,000 flood prevention system would reduce the risk of hurricane damage to the data center by 50%, purchasing that system is probably a good decision, because it has an expected payback period of less than one year. In a cloud-centric environment, business continuity planning becomes a collaboration between cloud service providers and the customer. For example, the risk of a hurricane damaging a data center may be mitigated by the service provider building a flood-prevention system, but it also may be mitigated by the customer choosing to replicate a service across data centers, availability zones, and geographic regions.
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Contents
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The goals of information security2m 11s
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Authentication, authorization, and accounting (AAA)3m 31s
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Categorizing security controls5m 11s
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Conducting a gap analysis2m 34s
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Zero Trust5m 32s
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Physical access control4m 40s
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Physical security personnel2m 12s
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Deception technologies2m 55s
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Change management6m 2s
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Trust models2m 52s
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PKI and digital certificates4m 5s
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Hash functions7m 38s
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Digital signatures3m 50s
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Digital signature standard1m 27s
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Create a digital certificate4m 55s
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Revoke a digital certificate1m 28s
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Certificate stapling2m 29s
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Certificate authorities6m 13s
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Certificate subjects3m 35s
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Certificate types2m 55s
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Certificate formats2m 30s
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Preventing SQL injection4m 25s
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Understanding cross-site scripting3m 17s
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Request forgery4m 8s
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Overflow attacks3m 21s
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Explaining cookies and attachments4m 7s
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Session hijacking4m 8s
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Code execution attacks2m 43s
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Privilege escalation1m 56s
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OWASP Top Ten4m 45s
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Application security4m 3s
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Defending against directory traversal3m 4s
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Race condition vulnerabilities2m 13s
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Restricting network access2m 8s
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Network access control4m 30s
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Router configuration security4m 5s
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Switch configuration security3m 42s
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Maintaining network availability2m 32s
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Network monitoring3m 41s
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SNMP2m 54s
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Isolating sensitive systems2m
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Zero trust networking4m 9s
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Secure access service edge (SASE)3m 50s
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Operating system security8m 44s
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Malware prevention7m 25s
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Application management3m 46s
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Host-based network security controls7m 44s
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File integrity monitoring4m 9s
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Data loss prevention5m 17s
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Data encryption5m 39s
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Hardware and firmware security5m 24s
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Linux file permissions4m 2s
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Web content filtering1m 47s
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What is vulnerability management?5m 2s
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Identify scan targets4m 24s
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Scan configuration5m 20s
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Scan perspective4m 24s
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Security Content Automation Protocol (SCAP)2m 27s
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Common Vulnerability Scoring System (CVSS )3m 31s
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Analyzing scan reports4m 37s
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Correlating scan results2m 20s
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Vulnerability response and remediation2m 14s
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Authentication factors3m 26s
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Multifactor authentication2m 17s
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Something you have4m 24s
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Password policy4m 19s
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Password managers2m 3s
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Passwordless authentication3m 23s
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Single sign-on and federation3m 9s
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Kerberos and LDAP5m 18s
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SAML2m 35s
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OAUTH and OpenID Connect2m 55s
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Certificate-based authentication5m 25s
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