- Disk failure
- Power failure and surges
- Physical Theft
Sunday, 11 March 2012
Accidents and other risks
Recall that availability is one of the three key elements of
information security. Although all stored data can become unavailable
-- if the media it’s stored on is physically damaged, destroyed, or
lost -- data stored on hard disks is at higher risk due to the
mechanical nature of the device. Hard disk crashes are a common cause
of data loss on personal computers. Regular system backups are the
only effective remedy.
Power problems (surges, blackouts, and brown-outs) can cause
physical damage to a computer, inducing a hard disk crash or otherwise
harming the electronic components of the computer. Common mitigation
methods include using surge suppressors and uninterruptible power
supplies (UPS).
Physical theft of a computer, of course, results in the loss of
confidentiality and availability, and (assuming the computer is ever
recovered) makes the integrity of the data stored on the disk suspect.
Regular system backups (with the backups stored somewhere away from
the computer) allow for recovery of the data, but backups alone cannot
address confidentiality. Cryptographic tools are available that can
encrypt data stored on a computer’s hard disk. The CERT/CC encourages the
use of these tools if the computer contains sensitive data or is at
high risk of theft (e.g. laptops or other portable computers).
Labels:
Security software
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