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Security group releases business-relevant metrics

Security group releases business-relevant metrics

By:  Kathleen Lau  On: 10 Sep 2008 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

The Center for Internet Security will make its metrics available as a community resource and will include ways of measuring vulnerability assessments and time to recover from security incidents. How you can use these metrics to improve your company’s security

A security association soon to launch metrics for measuring infrastructure security said today’s IT managers are applying inconsistent approaches to measuring security improvements across their organization’s IT infrastructure.

Bert Miuccio, CEO with the Center for Internet Security (CIS), said the inconsistency lies not only within, but across enterprises as well. “Government and industry spend lots of time and money to improve cyber security, but often the focus is more on compliance with best practices rather than outcomes,” he said.

Hershey, Pennsylvania-based CIS, a non-profit organization promoting IT security among businesses, plans to release before year’s end, IT security metrics defined through collaboration among a group of security professionals from corporate, government and academic organizations.

The metrics include two outcome metrics: mean time between security incidents, and mean time to recover from security incidents. The remaining are process metrics: percentage of systems configured to approved standards, patched to policy, with anti-virus; the percentage of business applications that have undergone a risk assessment, and a penetration or vulnerability assessment; and, the percentage of application code that has undergone a security assessment, threat model analysis, or code review prior to production deployment.

The metric definitions will be available to the public as a community resource. But a value-add for CIS member organizations is the availability of a hosted software designed to help IT managers track and evaluate security performance over time by recording metric data and generating reports. The idea is that these reports will reveal a correlation between measured outcomes and the implementation of specific security practices.

For instance, if the mean time between security incidents is on the rise, an IT manager “can look at process outcome indicators and see what factors might be leading to that decreased performance so it’s a way of drilling down into the data,” said Miuccio.

And with that knowledge, he continued, “they can start to make adjustments to the processes, they can shift resources, they can emphasize one process over another, redesign a process, and can implement a best practice.”

The software also allows IT managers to compare their organization’s security infrastructure with those of anonymous businesses in a similar vertical.

Miuccio said although CIS is targeting companies of all sizes with these metrics, they will likely be of greater use to larger enterprises, which typically have more sophisticated security programs and larger security investments.


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Kathleen Lau Kathleen Lau was a senior writer with ITWorldCanada.com and ComputerWorld Canada from December 2006 to August 2011.In her role as senior writer, she covered broadly technology news and issues r... more

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