Difference between revisions of "Attack Tree"

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==== DIESIS project ====
 
==== DIESIS project ====
The DIESIS project<ref name="diesis">http://www.diesis-project.eu/</ref> gives the following definition:
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{{quote-diesis|"Attack trees provide a formal, methodical way of describing the security of systems, based on varying attacks. Basically, you represent attacks against a system in a tree structure, with the goal as the root node and different ways of achieving that goal as leaf nodes" <ref name="Schneier1999"> Bruce Schneier (1999). Attack Trees. Dr Dobb's Journal, v.24, n.12, December 1999</ref>.}}
 
 
{{quote|"Attack trees provide a formal, methodical way of describing the security of systems, based on varying attacks. Basically, you represent attacks against a system in a tree structure, with the goal as the root node and different ways of achieving that goal as leaf nodes" <ref name="Schneier1999"> Bruce Schneier (1999). Attack Trees. Dr Dobb's Journal, v.24, n.12, December 1999</ref>.}}
 
  
 
=== Other International Definitions ===
 
=== Other International Definitions ===
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=== National Definitions ===
 
=== National Definitions ===
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==== Country Name====
 
==== Country Name====
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Insert the definition found on the DHS Lexicon (this is an example). -->
  
 
===Standard Definition===
 
===Standard Definition===

Revision as of 10:38, 10 June 2014


Definitions

European Definitions

DIESIS project

The DIESIS project [1] gives the following definition:

"Attack trees provide a formal, methodical way of describing the security of systems, based on varying attacks. Basically, you represent attacks against a system in a tree structure, with the goal as the root node and different ways of achieving that goal as leaf nodes" [2].


Other International Definitions

United Nations’ Definition

National Definitions

Standard Definition

Discussion Topic

See also

Notes

  1. http://www.diesis-project.eu/
  2. Bruce Schneier (1999). Attack Trees. Dr Dobb's Journal, v.24, n.12, December 1999

References