Introduction to Computer Security draws upon Bishop's widely praised Computer Security: Art and Science, without the highly complex and mathematical coverage that most undergraduate students would find difficult or unnecessary.
For the non-technical home and small-office Internet user, this guide teaches "digital commonsense." Readers will learn easy-to-implement, cost-effective ways of protecting their children, finances, privacy, and data.
In this book, the authors of the 20-year best-selling classic Security in Computing take a fresh, contemporary, and powerfully relevant new approach to introducing computer security.
"This is an excellent text that should be read by every computer security professional and student." Dick Kemmerer, University of California, Santa Barbara.
This book discusses the approaches to ensure the integrity of stored data. Organized into eight chapters, this book begins with an overview of the relationships between privacy issues and security measures.
This book is oriented toward the average computer user, business professional, government worker, and those within the education community, with the expectation that readers can learn to use the network with some degree of safety and ...
Fundamentals of Cryptography and Steganography 3. Mathematical models of information security 4. Insider threats 5. Social engineering and low-tech attacks 6. Spam, phishing, and Trojans: attacks meant to fool 7. Biometric authentication 8.
The Comprehensive Guide to Computer Security, Extensively Revised with Newer Technologies, Methods, Ideas, and Examples In this updated guide, University of California at Davis Computer Security Laboratory co-director Matt Bishop offers ...
Written for self-study and course use, this book will suit a variety of introductory and more advanced security programs for students of computer science, engineering and related disciplines.