Domains/Modules/Chapters
This course covers the following chapters and learning objectives:
Chapter 1: The Information Security Environment
- Justify an organizational code of ethics.
- Relate confidentiality, integrity, availability, non-repudiation, authenticity, privacy and safety to due care and due diligence.
- Relate information security governance to organizational business strategies, goals, missions, and objectives.
- Apply the concepts of cybercrime to data breaches and other information security compromises.
- Relate legal, contractual, and regulatory requirements for privacy and data protection to information security objectives.
- Relate transborder data movement and import-export issues to data protection, privacy, and intellectual property protection.
Chapter 2: Information Asset Security
- Relate the IT asset management and data security lifecycle models to information security.
- Explain the use of information classification and categorization, as two separate but related processes.
- Describe the different data states and their information security considerations.
- Describe the different roles involved in the use of information, and the security considerations for these roles.
- Describe the different types and categories of information security controls and their use.
- Select data security standards to meet organizational compliance requirements.
Chapter 3: Identity and Access Management (IAM)
- Explain the identity lifecycle as it applies to human and nonhuman users.
- Compare and contrast access control models, mechanisms, and concepts.
- Explain the role of authentication, authorization, and accounting in achieving information security goals and objectives.
- Explain how IAM implementations must protect physical and logical assets.
- Describe the role of credentials and the identity store in IAM systems.
Chapter 4: Security Architecture and Engineering
- Describe the major components of security engineering standards.
- Explain major architectural models for information security.
- Explain the security capabilities implemented in hardware and firmware.
- Apply security principles to different information systems architectures and their environments.
- Determine the best application of cryptographic approaches to solving organizational information security needs.
- Manage the use of certificates and digital signatures to meet organizational information security needs.
- Discover the implications of the failure to use cryptographic techniques to protect the supply chain.
- Apply different cryptographic management solutions to meet the organizational information security needs.
- Verify cryptographic solutions are working and meeting the evolving threat of the real world.
- Describe defenses against common cryptographic attacks.
- Develop a management checklist to determine the organization’s cryptologic state of health and readiness.
Chapter 5: Communication and Network Security
- Describe the architectural characteristics, relevant technologies, protocols and security considerations of each of the layers in the OSI model.
- Explain the application of secure design practices in developing network infrastructure.
- Describe the evolution of methods to secure IP communications protocols.
- Explain the security implications of bound (cable and fiber) and unbound (wireless) network environments.
- Describe the evolution of, and security implications for, key network devices.
- Evaluate and contrast the security issues with voice communications in traditional and VoIP infrastructures.
- Describe and contrast the security considerations for key remote access technologies.
- Explain the security implications of software-defined networking (SDN) and network virtualization technologies.
Chapter 6: Software Development Security
- Recognize the many software elements that can put information systems security at risk.
- Identify and illustrate major causes of security weaknesses in source code.
- Illustrate major causes of security weaknesses in database and data warehouse systems.
- Explain the applicability of the OWASP framework to various web architectures.
- Select malware mitigation strategies appropriate to organizational information security needs.
- Contrast the ways that different software development methodologies, frameworks, and guidelines contribute to systems security.
- Explain the implementation of security controls for software development ecosystems.
- Choose an appropriate mix of security testing, assessment, controls, and management methods for different systems and applications environments.
Chapter 7: Security Assessment and Testing
- Describe the purpose, process, and objectives of formal and informal security assessment and testing.
- Apply professional and organizational ethics to security assessment and testing.
- Explain internal, external, and third-party assessment and testing.
- Explain management and governance issues related to planning and conducting security assessments.
- Explain the role of assessment in data-driven security decision-making.
Chapter 8: Security Operations
- Show how to efficiently and effectively gather and assess security data.
- Explain the security benefits of effective change management and change control.
- Develop incident response policies and plans.
- Link incident response to needs for security controls and their operational use.
- Relate security controls to improving and achieving required availability of information assets and systems.
- Understand the security and safety ramifications of various facilities, systems, and infrastructure characteristics.
Chapter 9: Putting It All Together
- Explain how governance frameworks and processes relate to the operational use of information security controls.
- Relate the process of conducting forensic investigations to information security operations.
- Relate business continuity and disaster recovery preparedness to information security operations.
- Explain how to use education, training, awareness, and engagement with all members of the organization as a way to strengthen and enforce information security processes.
- Show how to operationalize information systems and IT supply chain risk management.
Note: Throughout this course, exam domains may be covered in several chapters. Included in the course is a table indicating where the exam outline objectives are covered in this course.