Schneier on Security: Difference between revisions
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==Schneier on Security== | |||
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==Full Citation== | ==Full Citation== | ||
Bruce Schneier, Schneier on Security (2008) | |||
[http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/cybersecurity/?title=Special:Bibliography&view=detailed&startkey=Schneier_B:2008&f=wikibiblio.bib ''BibTeX''] | |||
==Categorization== | ==Categorization== | ||
Issues: [[ | Issues: [[Books]] | ||
==Key Words== | ==Key Words== | ||
terrorism, security, national security policy, airline travel, privacy, surveillance, ID cards, election security, disasters, economics of security, psychology of security, business, cybercrime, cyberwar, computer and information security | |||
==Synopsis== | ==Synopsis== | ||
This collection of essays on security: on security technology, on security policy, and on how security works in the real world was previously published between June 2002 and June 2008. They offer a computer security expert's insights into a wide range of security issues, including the risk of identity theft (vastly overrated), the long-range security threat of unchecked presidential power, why computer security is fundamentally an economic problem, the industry power struggle over controlling your computer, and why national ID cards won't make us safer, only poorer. Schneier recognizes that the ultimate security risk is people and that many security paractices are, in fact, security risks. | |||
==Additional Notes and Highlights== | ==Additional Notes and Highlights== |
Revision as of 10:25, 2 June 2010
Schneier on Security
Full Citation
Bruce Schneier, Schneier on Security (2008)
Categorization
Issues: Books
Key Words
terrorism, security, national security policy, airline travel, privacy, surveillance, ID cards, election security, disasters, economics of security, psychology of security, business, cybercrime, cyberwar, computer and information security
Synopsis
This collection of essays on security: on security technology, on security policy, and on how security works in the real world was previously published between June 2002 and June 2008. They offer a computer security expert's insights into a wide range of security issues, including the risk of identity theft (vastly overrated), the long-range security threat of unchecked presidential power, why computer security is fundamentally an economic problem, the industry power struggle over controlling your computer, and why national ID cards won't make us safer, only poorer. Schneier recognizes that the ultimate security risk is people and that many security paractices are, in fact, security risks.
Additional Notes and Highlights
Table of Contents Introduction Terrorism and Security National Security Policy Airline Travel Privacy and Surveillance ID Cards and Security Election Security Security and Disasters Economics of Security Psychology of Security Business of Security Cybercrime and Cyberwar Computer and Information Security References Index