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Author, Cybersecurity Resources: A Cost-Benefit Analysis

Author, Cybersecurity Resources: A Cost-Benefit Analysis

By:  Rosie Lombardi  On: 13 Feb 2006 For: IT World Canada Creator

Arming senior IT executives with a rational, economic approach to allocating security funds is the aim of a new book, Managing Cybersecurity Resources: A Cost-Benefit Analysis by Lawrence A. Gordon and Martin P. Loeb, both professors of managerial accounting and information assurance at the University of Maryland.Written in plain English, the book provides a framework for building compelling business cases that will warm the cockles of the CFO's heart.

Some major consulting firms sell cybersecurity cost-benefit models and services, and to the extent they are based on sound economic principles, says Gordon, they too can assist decision-making. "Economics is economics," he says. "But what's different is we're not selling our approach, and we have no financial incentives. We want to see our research utilized."

Managing Cybersecurity Resources could be described as an open source, self-serve approach to infosec. "Our goal is to get other people to apply this to their own organizations – they know their needs best," he says. "In fact, we'll discuss the model over lunch with any organization's representatives who come to us for help applying the book's principles for free."

Bruce McConnell, president at McConnell International, a Washington-based technology policy and management consultancy, believes the book is one of the first serious attempts to develop a methodology that allows cybersecurity managers to tackle investments in a systematic way.

"This codifies the risk-based approach and quantification of risk via probability, and is an [improvement] on the state of the art," says McConnell, who was involved in tightening information security at the White House in a former position. "The draw








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Rosie Lombardi Rosie Lombardi is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.

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