Alla inlägg den 2 april 2023

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Av Svenn Dybvik - 2 april 2023 00:00

https://www.commoncriteriaportal.org/index.cfm


Common Criteria

The Common Criteria for Information Technology Security Evaluation (CC), and the companion Common Methodology for Information Technology Security Evaluation (CEM) are the technical basis for an international agreement, the Common Criteria Recognition Arrangement (CCRA), which ensures that:

  • Products can be evaluated by competent and independent licensed laboratories so as to determine the fulfilment of particular security properties, to a certain extent or assurance;
  • Supporting documents, are used within the Common Criteria certification process to define how the criteria and evaluation methods are applied when certifying specific technologies;
  • The certification of the security properties of an evaluated product can be issued by a number of Certificate Authorizing Schemes, with this certification being based on the result of their evaluation;
  • These certificates are recognized by all the signatories of the CCRA.

The CC is the driving force for the widest available mutual recognition of secure IT products. This web portal is available to support the information on the status of the CCRA, the CC and the certification schemes, licensed laboratories, certified products and related information, news and events.







https://owasp.org/www-project-top-ten/


The OWASP Top 10 is a standard awareness document for developers and web application security. It represents a broad consensus about the most critical security risks to web applications.

Globally recognized by developers as the first step towards more secure coding.

Companies should adopt this document and start the process of ensuring that their web applications minimize these risks. Using the OWASP Top 10 is perhaps the most effective first step towards changing the software development culture within your organization into one that produces more secure code.

Top 10 Web Application Security Risks

There are three new categories, four categories with naming and scoping changes, and some consolidation in the Top 10 for 2021.


  • A01:2021-Broken Access Control moves up from the fifth position; 94% of applications were tested for some form of broken access control. The 34 Common Weakness Enumerations (CWEs) mapped to Broken Access Control had more occurrences in applications than any other category.
  • A02:2021-Cryptographic Failures shifts up one position to #2, previously known as Sensitive Data Exposure, which was broad symptom rather than a root cause. The renewed focus here is on failures related to cryptography which often leads to sensitive data exposure or system compromise.
  • A03:2021-Injection slides down to the third position. 94% of the applications were tested for some form of injection, and the 33 CWEs mapped into this category have the second most occurrences in applications. Cross-site Scripting is now part of this category in this edition.
  • A04:2021-Insecure Design is a new category for 2021, with a focus on risks related to design flaws. If we genuinely want to “move left” as an industry, it calls for more use of threat modeling, secure design patterns and principles, and reference architectures.
  • A05:2021-Security Misconfiguration moves up from #6 in the previous edition; 90% of applications were tested for some form of misconfiguration. With more shifts into highly configurable software, it’s not surprising to see this category move up. The former category for XML External Entities (XXE) is now part of this category.
  • A06:2021-Vulnerable and Outdated Components was previously titled Using Components with Known Vulnerabilities and is #2 in the Top 10 community survey, but also had enough data to make the Top 10 via data analysis. This category moves up from #9 in 2017 and is a known issue that we struggle to test and assess risk. It is the only category not to have any Common Vulnerability and Exposures (CVEs) mapped to the included CWEs, so a default exploit and impact weights of 5.0 are factored into their scores.
  • A07:2021-Identification and Authentication Failures was previously Broken Authentication and is sliding down from the second position, and now includes CWEs that are more related to identification failures. This category is still an integral part of the Top 10, but the increased availability of standardized frameworks seems to be helping.
  • A08:2021-Software and Data Integrity Failures is a new category for 2021, focusing on making assumptions related to software updates, critical data, and CI/CD pipelines without verifying integrity. One of the highest weighted impacts from Common Vulnerability and Exposures/Common Vulnerability Scoring System (CVE/CVSS) data mapped to the 10 CWEs in this category. Insecure Deserialization from 2017 is now a part of this larger category.
  • A09:2021-Security Logging and Monitoring Failures was previously Insufficient Logging & Monitoring and is added from the industry survey (#3), moving up from #10 previously. This category is expanded to include more types of failures, is challenging to test for, and isn’t well represented in the CVE/CVSS data. However, failures in this category can directly impact visibility, incident alerting, and forensics.
  • A10:2021-Server-Side Request Forgery is added from the Top 10 community survey (#1). The data shows a relatively low incidence rate with above average testing coverage, along with above-average ratings for Exploit and Impact potential. This category represents the scenario where the security community members are telling us this is important, even though it’s not illustrated in the data at this time.

 

 

 

 

 

https://www.ncsc.gov.uk/section/advice-guidance/all-topics?allTopics=true&topics=critical%20national%20infrastructure%20(cni)&sort=date%2Bdesc

Critical National Infrastructure (CNI)

National assets that are essential for the functioning of society, such as those associated with energy supply, water supply, transportation, health and telecommunications.

 

 

 

 

 

 

https://www.ncsc.gov.uk/section/advice-guidance/all-topics?allTopics=true&topics=artificial%20intelligence&sort=date%2Bdesc

Artificial intelligence

Artificial intelligence (AI) describes computer systems which can perform tasks usually requiring human intelligence. This could include visual perception, speech recognition or translation between languages.

 

 

 

 

 

 

https://www.ncsc.gov.uk/section/advice-guidance/all-topics?allTopics=true&topics=social%20media&sort=date%2Bdesc

Social media

Websites and apps, such as Facebook, X and Instragram, that allow people to share and respond to user-generated content (text posts, photos and video).

 

 

 

 

 

 

https://www.ncsc.gov.uk/section/advice-guidance/all-topics?allTopics=true&topics=cloud&sort=date%2Bdesc

Cloud

An on-demand, massively scalable service, hosted on shared infrastructure, accessible via the internet. Typical services include providing data storage, data processing, and pre-built functionality, such as logging.

 

 

 

 

 

 

https://www.ncsc.gov.uk/section/advice-guidance/all-topics?allTopics=true&topics=cyber%20strategy&sort=date%2Bdesc

Cyber strategy

A long-term plan of action with the aim of implementing cyber security.

 

 

 

 

 

 

https://www.ncsc.gov.uk/section/advice-guidance/all-topics?allTopics=true&topics=asset%20management&sort=date%2Bdesc

Asset management

Identifying and recording of an organisation's physical assets, software, data, essential staff and utilities.

 

 

 

 

 

 

https://www.ncsc.gov.uk/section/advice-guidance/all-topics?allTopics=true&topics=configuration%20management&sort=date%2Bdesc

Configuration management

Processes for defining and maintaining the consistency of configurations of software, hardware and other elements of an organisation to ensure reliable performance through its life.

 

 

 

 

 

 

https://www.ncsc.gov.uk/section/advice-guidance/all-topics?allTopics=true&topics=device&sort=date%2Bdesc

Device

Computer-based hardware that physically exists, such as a desktop computer, smartphone or tablet.

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