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Threat Modeling

Threat Modeling

By : Adam Shostack
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Threat Modeling

Threat Modeling

By: Adam Shostack

Overview of this book

As more software is delivered on the Internet or operates on Internet-connected devices, the design of secure software is critical. This book will give you the confidence to design secure software products and systems and test their designs against threats. This book is the only security book to be chosen as a Dr. Dobbs Jolt Award Finalist since Bruce Schneier?s Secrets and Lies and Applied Cryptography! The book starts with an introduction to threat modeling and focuses on the key new skills that you'll need to threat model and lays out a methodology that's designed for people who are new to threat modeling. Next, you?ll explore approaches to find threats and study the advantages and disadvantages of each approach. Moving ahead, you?ll manage threats and learn about the activities involved in threat modeling. You?ll also focus on threat modeling of specific technologies and find out tricky areas and learn to address them. Towards the end, you?ll shift your attention to the future of threat modeling and its approaches in your organization. By the end of this book, you?ll be able to use threat modeling in the security development lifecycle and in the overall software and systems design processes.
Table of Contents (15 chapters)
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1
Cover
7
Glossary
8
Bibliography
10
End User License Agreement

Part I
Getting Started

This part of the book is for those who are new to threat modeling, and it assumes no prior knowledge of threat modeling or security. It focuses on the key new skills that you'll need to threat model and lays out a methodology that's designed for people who are new to threat modeling.

Part I also introduces the various ways to approach threat modeling using a set of toy analogies. Much like there are many children's toys for modeling, there are many ways to threat model. There are model kits with precisely molded parts to create airplanes or ships. These kits have a high degree of fidelity and a low level of flexibility. There are also numerous building block systems such as Lincoln Logs, Erector Sets, and Lego blocks. Each of these allows for more flexibility, at the price of perhaps not having a propeller that's quite right for the plane you want to model.

In threat modeling, there are techniques that center on attackers, assets, or software...

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Threat Modeling
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