Security testing
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Security Testing: (The) Process to determine that an IS (Information System) protects data and maintains functionality as intended.
The six basic security concepts that need to be covered by security testing are: confidentiality, integrity, authentication, authorisation, availability and non-repudiation.
Contents |
[edit] Confidentiality
- A security measure which protects against the disclosure of information to parties other than the intended recipient that is by no means the only way of ensuring.
[edit] Integrity
- A measure intended to allow the receiver to determine that the information which it receives has not been altered in transit or by other than the originator of the information.
- Integrity schemes often use some of the same underlying technologies as confidentiality schemes, but they usually involve adding additional information to a communication to form the basis of an algorithmic check rather than the encoding all of the communication.
[edit] Authentication
- A measure designed to establish the validity of a transmission, message, or originator.
- Allows a receiver to have confidence that information it receives originated from a specific known source.
[edit] Authorization
- The process of determining that a requester is allowed to receive a service or perform an operation.
- Access control is an example of authorization.
[edit] Availability
- Assuring information and communications services will be ready for use when expected.
- Information must be kept available to authorized persons when they need it.
Also authority to operate
[edit] Non-repudiation
- A measure intended to prevent the later denial that an action happened, or a communication that took place etc.
- In communication terms this often involves the interchange of authentication information combined with some form of provable time stamp.

