Difference between revisions of "Attack Tree"
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==== DIESIS project ==== | ==== DIESIS project ==== | ||
− | {{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"{{Schneier99}}.}} | + | {{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"{{Schneier99}}.}} |
=== Other International Definitions === | === Other International Definitions === |
Revision as of 09:55, 17 June 2014
Contents
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
- ↑ http://www.diesis-project.eu/
- ↑ Bruce Schneier (1999). Attack Trees. Dr Dobb's Journal, v.24, n.12, December 1999