Computer Security Principles and Practice 4th Edition By William Stallings - Test Bank
1. Threats are attacks carried out.
T F 2. Computer security is protection of the
integrity, availability, and
confidentiality of information system
resources.
T F 3. Data integrity assures that information and
programs are changed only
in a specified and authorized manner.
T
F 4. Availability assures that systems works
promptly and service is not
denied to authorized users.
T F 5. The “A” in the CIA triad stands for
“authenticity”.
T F 6. The more critical a component or service, the
higher the level of
availability required.
T F 7. Computer security is essentially a battle of
wits between a perpetrator
who tries to find holes and the
administrator who tries to close them.
T F 8. Security mechanisms typically do not involve
more than one particular
algorithm
or protocol.
T F 9. Many security administrators view strong
security as an impediment to
efficient
and user-friendly operation of an information system.
T F 10. In the context of security our concern is
with the vulnerabilities of
system
resources.
T F 11. Hardware is the most vulnerable to attack and
the least susceptible to
automated
controls.
T F 12. Contingency planning is a functional area
that primarily requires
computer
security technical measures.
T F 13. X.800 architecture was developed as an
international standard and
focuses
on security in the context of networks and communications.
T F 14. The first step in devising security services
and mechanisms is to
develop
a security policy.
T F 15. Assurance is the process of examining a
computer product or system
with
respect to certain criteria.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTIONS:
1.
__________ assures that individuals control or
influence what information related to them may be collected and stored and by
whom and to whom that information may be disclosed.
A.
Availability B. System Integrity
C. Privacy D. Data Integrity
2.
________ assures that a system performs its intended
function in an unimpaired manner, free from deliberate or inadvertent
unauthorized manipulation of the system.
A. System
Integrity B. Data Integrity
C.
Availability D. Confidentiality
3.
A loss of _________ is the unauthorized disclosure
of information.
A.
confidentiality B. integrity
C. authenticity D. availability
4. A
________ level breach of security could be expected to have a severe or
catastrophic adverse effect on organizational operations, organizational
assets, or individuals.
A. low B. normal
C. moderate D. high
5. A
flaw or weakness in a system’s design, implementation, or operation and
management that could be exploited to violate the system’s security policy
is a(n) __________.
A. countermeasure B. vulnerability
C. adversary D. risk
6. An assault on system security that derives
from an intelligent act that is a deliberate attempt to evade security services
and violate the security policy of a system is a(n) __________.
A. risk B. asset
C. attack D. vulnerability
7. A(n) __________ is an action, device,
procedure, or technique that reduces a threat, a vulnerability, or an attack by
eliminating or preventing it, by minimizing the harm it can cause, or by
discovering and reporting it so that correct action can be taken.
A. attack B. countermeasure
C. adversary D. protocol
8. A(n) _________ is an attempt to learn or make
use of information from the system that does not affect system resources.
A. passive
attack B.
inside attack
C. outside
attack D. active attack
9. Masquerade, falsification, and repudiation
are threat actions that cause __________ threat consequences.
A.
unauthorized disclosure B. deception
C.
disruption D. usurpation
10. A threat action in which sensitive data are
directly released to an unauthorized entity is __________.
A.
corruption B. disruption
C. intrusion D. exposure
11. An example of __________ is an attempt by an
unauthorized user to gain access to a system by posing as an authorized user.
A.
masquerade B. interception
C.
repudiation D. inference
12. The _________ prevents or inhibits the normal
use or management of communications facilities.
A. passive
attack B. traffic encryption