Overview
The Internet was built without much in the way of security features and we have been dealing with the effects of those design decisions ever since. Fortunately there is a well-established set of principles that can be applied to improve network security; the principle of least-privilege and defense in depth are two prominent examples. Security is a systems problem: a large collection of moving parts such as key management, encryption, integrity protection, and authentication need to be addressed in a coordinated way to provide secure communication. This book draws on real-world examples ranging from Transport Layer Security (TLS) to the security of the Internet's core infrastructure to explain how secure networks are built and how end-systems connected to the Internet can be protected.
Features:
- Introduces principles of network security that have proven to be effective
- Describes the building blocks of secure systems such as encryption, message authentication codes, and key distribution
- Illustrates the systems approach to security using examples such as Transport Layer Security (TLS 1.3)
- Covers the latest developments in securing the naming and routing systems of the Internet
"This book fills a vital niche: it comprehensively initiates the reader into a systems approach to reasoning about network security, in all its depth and nuance." - Brad Karp, University College London
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Details
- ISBN-13: 9798993764504
- ISBN-10: 9798993764504
- Publisher: Systems Approach, LLC
- Publish Date: November 2025
- Dimensions: 9.25 x 7.5 x 0.47 inches
- Shipping Weight: 0.9 pounds
- Page Count: 172
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