ISO/IEC 27033-1
Information technology - Security techniques - Network security - Part 1: Overview and concepts
Organization: | ISO |
Publication Date: | 15 August 2015 |
Status: | active |
Page Count: | 58 |
ICS Code (Information coding): | 35.040 |
scope:
This part of ISO/IEC 27033 provides an overview of network
security and related definitions. It defines and describes the
concepts associated with, and provides management guidance on,
network security. (Network security applies to the security of
devices, security of management activities related to the devices,
applications/service
It is relevant to anyone involved in owning, operating or using a network. This includes senior managers and other non-technical managers or users, in addition to managers and administrators who have specific responsibilities for information security and/or network security, network operation, or who are responsible for an organization's overall security program and security policy development. It is also relevant to anyone involved in the planning, design and implementation of the architectural aspects of network security.
This part of ISO/IEC 27033 also includes the following:
- provides guidance on how to identify and analyse network security risks and the definition of network security requirements based on that analysis,
- provides an overview of the controls that support network technical security architectures and related technical controls, as well as those non-technical controls and technical controls that are applicable not just to networks,
- introduces how to achieve good quality network technical security architectures, and the risk, design and control aspects associated with typical network scenarios and network "technology" areas (which are dealt with in detail in subsequent parts of ISO/IEC 27033), and briefly addresses the issues associated with implementing and operating network security controls, and the on-going monitoring and reviewing of their implementation.
Overall, it provides an overview of this International Standard and a "road map" to all other parts.