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Auditing and Security: AS/400, NT, UNIX, Networks, and Disaster Recovery Plans
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Auditing and Security: AS/400, NT, UNIX, Networks, and Disaster Recovery Plans

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Description:

A complete and definitive guide to auditing the security of IT systems for managers, CIOs, controllers, and auditors
This up-to-date resource provides all the tools you need to perform practical security audits on the entire spectrum of a company's IT platforms-from the mainframe to the individual PC-as well as the networks that connect them to each other and to the global marketplace. Auditing and Security: AS/400, NT, Unix, Networks, and Disaster Recovery Plans is the first book on IT security written specifically for the auditor, detailing what controls are necessary to ensure a secure system regardless of the specific hardware, software, or architecture a company runs. The author uses helpful checklists and diagrams and a practical, rather than theoretical, method to understanding and auditing a company's IT security systems and their requirements. This comprehensive volume covers the full range of issues relating to security audits, including:
* Hardware and software
* Operating systems
* Network connections
* The cooperation of logical and physical security systems
* Disaster recovery planning

Product Details:
Author: Yusufali F. Musaji
Hardcover: 552 pages
Publisher: Wiley
Publication Date: February 21, 2001
Language: English
ISBN: 0471383716
Product Length: 10.0 inches
Product Width: 7.0 inches
Product Height: 1.25 inches
Product Weight: 2.79 pounds
Package Length: 10.23 inches
Package Width: 7.34 inches
Package Height: 1.32 inches
Package Weight: 2.79 pounds
Average Customer Rating: based on 2 reviews
Customer Reviews:
Average Customer Review: 1.0 ( 2 customer reviews )
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

3 of 4 found the following review helpful:

1Not a good source for recent AS/400 infoApr 16, 2003
By John Earl
Because the book was published in 2001, and it used the AS/400 name in it's title, I expected it to be a good source on recent developments in security on the AS/400 (AKA the IBM iSeries). I am dissapointed. While the information that is included in the book seems generally accurate (I have a few quibbles in areas like QSECURITY, Adopted Authority, CHGSYSLIBL, and CRTAUT to name a few), the big problem is that there are huge chunks of current technologies that are not even addressed in this audit standard.

Some examples include, the entire IFS (Integrated File System), Operations Navigator, NetServer and other network servers like SMTP, HTTP, FTP, etc. No reference to exit programs beyond the ancient PCSACC and DDMACC network attirbutes, spotty acknowledgement of System Values added after V3R1 (1995?) and a general lack of understanding of what the potential security exposures might be in areas that were audited. It's one thing to say that you should "discuss with management" the existance on a workstation entry in subsystem QDSNX, but what is an auditor to discuss if the author hasn't explained the potential security exposure?

It may be a rally good book with respect ot the other OS's that it purports to cover, but from an OS/400 perspective it is not current enough to be very effective on modern versions.

1Not intended for auditorsSep 18, 2009
By Dave
As an experienced Technology Auditor, I picked up this book to brush up on some of the considerations involved in auditing UNIX systems. After reading through most of the section on UNIX, I couldnt help but think that this book was written without considering the intended audience. Generally speaking, an IT Auditor has to be a jack-of-all-trades when it comes to systems, because it is extremely difficult to find a company that uses ONLY Unix, or ONLY Windows, or ONLY Linux. As a result, the IT Auditor has to know enough about each system to navigate through, but is not necessarily an expert in any of them.

This book seems to be written for a security administrator, assuming that the reader knows the details of every command the system has to offer and offering little or no explanation as to what the command does. Convincing a system administrator to run a command that you, as the auditor, do not understand is potentially disasterous.

Beyond that, typos and spelling errors within the commands (ex: using "is -1" instead of "ls -l" or "chcl" instead of "chacl"), are simply inexcusable for what they are charging for this book.

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