| Home > Architectural Risk Analysis: Traditional Risk Analysis Terminology | |
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In this excerpt from Chapter 5 of Software Security: Building Security In, author Gary McGraw reviews basic approaches to risk analysis and defines their shared concepts.
An in-depth analysis of all existing risk analysis approaches is beyond the scope of this book; instead, I summarize basic approaches, common features, strengths, weaknesses, and relative advantages and disadvantages. As a corpus, "traditional" methodologies are varied and view risk from different perspectives. Examples of basic approaches include the following:
Each basic approach has its merits, but even when approaches differ in the details, almost all of them share some common concepts that are valuable and should be considered in any risk analysis. These commonalities can be captured in a set of basic definitions.
Using these basic definitions, risk analysis approaches diverge on how to arrive at particular values for these attributes. A number of methods calculate a nominal value for an information asset and attempt to determine risk as a function of loss and event probability. Some methods use checklists of risk categories, threats, and attacks to ascertain risk. Download the rest of Chapter 5 from Software Security: Building Security In
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