Legal, Ethical, and Professional Issues in Information Security Principles of Information Security...

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Legal, Ethical, and Legal, Ethical, and Professional Issues in Professional Issues in Information SecurityInformation SecurityPrinciples of Information SecurityChapter 3

Chapter ObjectivesChapter ObjectivesUpon completion of this chapter you should be

able to:◦ Use this chapter as a guide for future reference

on laws, regulations, and professional organizations.

◦ Differentiate between laws and ethics.◦ Identify major national laws that relate to the

practice of information security.◦ Describe the role of culture as it applies to ethics

in information security.

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*Law and Ethics in Information *Law and Ethics in Information SecuritySecurity

Jean-Jacques Rousseau◦ The Social Contract or Principles of Political

Right (1762)◦ "The rules the members of a society create to balance

the right of the individual to self-determination with the needs of the society as a whole are called laws."

Laws**◦ Rules that mandate or prohibit certain behavior in

society.◦ Carry the sanctions of governing authority.

Ethics**◦ Define socially acceptable behaviors.◦ Universally recognized examples include murder,

theft, assault, and arson. Cultural Mores

◦ The fixed moral attitudes or customs of a particular group.

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Organizational LiabilityOrganizational Liability Liability**

◦ Legal obligation of an entity that extends beyond criminal or contract law.

◦ Includes obligation to make restitution, or compensate for, wrongs committed by an organization or its employees.

◦ Organization can be held financially liable (responsible) for actions of employees.

◦ Obligation increases if organization fails to take due care.

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Organizational Responsibilities Organizational Responsibilities forforDue Care and Due DiligenceDue Care and Due Diligence

Due care**◦ Must ensure that every employee knows

what is acceptable or unacceptable behavior consequences of illegal or unethical actions.

Due diligence**◦ Requires organization to

make a valid effort to protect others continually maintain this level of effort

◦ Internet has global reach --- injury/wrong can occur anywhere in the world.

Jurisdiction**◦ A court's right to hear a case if a wrong was committed in

its territory, or involves its citizenry --- long arm jurisdiction.

◦ In U.S., any court can impose its authority over individuals or organizations, if it can establish jurisdiction 5

Policy vs LawPolicy vs Law Laws

◦ External legal requirements Security policies**. Internal (organizational) rules that:

◦ Describe acceptable and unacceptable employee behaviors.

◦ Organizational laws --- including penalties and sanctions.◦ Must be complete, appropriate and fairly applied in the

work place.◦ In order to be enforceable, policies must be

Disseminated. Distributed to all individuals and readily available for employee reference.

Reviewed. Document distributed in a format that could be read by employeees.

Comprehended. Employees understand the requirements --- e.g., quizzes or other methods of assessment.

Compliance. Employee agrees to comply with the policy. Uniformly enforced, regardless of employee status or

assignment.6

Types of LawTypes of Law Civil law**

◦ Laws that govern a nation or state.

Criminal law**◦ Violations harmful to society

◦ Actively enforced by prosecution by the state.

Private law**◦ regulates relationship between individual and organization.

◦ encompasses family law, commercial law, labor law.

Public law**◦ regulates structure and administration of government agencies and their

relationships with citizens, employees, and other governments, providing careful checks and balances.

◦ Includes criminal, administrative and constitutional law.

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U.S. General Computer U.S. General Computer Crime LawsCrime Laws

Computer Fraud and Abuse Act of 1986 (CFA Act)**◦ Cornerstone of federal laws and enforcement acts

◦ Addresses threats to computers

Communications Act of 1934 ◦ Addresses Telecommunications

◦ modified by Telecommunications Deregulation and Competition Act of 1996 modernize archaic terminology

Computer Security Act of 1987**◦ Protect federal computer systems (federal agencies)

◦ Establish minimum acceptable security practices.

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U.S. Privacy LawsU.S. Privacy Laws Privacy Issues

◦ Collection of personal information◦ Clipper chip - never implemented

Privacy of Customer Information◦ U.S. Legal Code Privacy of Customer Information Section

Responsibilities of common carriers (phone co) to protect confidentiality Federal Privacy Act of 1974**

◦ Regulates government protection of privacy, with some exceptions Electronic Communications Privacy Act of 1986**

◦ Fourth Amendment - unlawful search and seizure Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996

(HIPAA)**◦ Kennedy-Kassebaum Act◦ Privacy of electronic data interchange for health care data

Financial Services Modernization Act (1999)**◦ Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act of 1999◦ Banks, securities firms, and insurance companies - disclosure of privacy

policies

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U.S. Copyright Law**U.S. Copyright Law** Recognizes intellectual property as a protected asset in

the U.S.◦ published word, including electronic formats

Fair use of copyrighted materials ◦ Includes

support news reporting teaching scholarship related activities

◦ Use MUST be for educational or library purposes not for profit not excessive include proper acknowledgment to original author

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Financial ReportingFinancial ReportingSarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002**

◦ Affects publicly traded corporations public accounting firms

◦ result of Enron, among others. improve reliability and accuracy of financial reporting. increase accountability of corporate governance in

publicly traded companies. Executives will need

◦ assurance on reliability and quality of information systems from information technology managers.

◦ Key issue: compliance with reporting requirements.

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Freedom of Information Act of 1996 Freedom of Information Act of 1996 (FOIA)**(FOIA)**

Any person may request access to federal agency records or information not determined to be a matter of national security.◦ Agencies must disclose requested information

After the request has been reviewed and determined not to pose a risk to national security.

Does NOT apply to:◦ state/local government agencies ◦ private businesses or individuals.

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State and Local State and Local RegulationsRegulations

Locally implemented laws pertaining to information security.

Information security professionals must be aware of these laws and comply with them.

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International Laws and Legal International Laws and Legal BodiesBodies

Few international laws relating to privacy and information security.

European Council Cyper-Crime Convention◦ 2001. Creates international task force◦ Improve effectiveness of international investigations◦ Emphasis on copyright infringement prosecution◦ Lacks realistic provisions for enforcement

WTO Agreement on Intellectual Property Rights◦ Intellectual property rules for multilateral trade

system. Digital Millenium Copyright Act**

◦ U.S. response to 1995 Directive 95/46/EC by E.U.◦ U.K. Database Right

United Nations Charter◦ Information Warfare provisions.

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Security Breaches Security Breaches PunishmentPunishment If not caught: illegal to demand a payment in order to

“disappear without a track”◦ But banks and financial institutions have to keep it quiet…

If caught in a “lawful” country: fines and/or jail sentence AOL employees

http://www.connectedhomemag.com/HomeOffice/Articles/Index.cfm?ArticleID=43090

http://www.aolsucks.org/ccaol2.htm

“$130 mil. stolen in computer crime. Each defendant faces the possibility of 35 years in prison, and more than $1 million in fines or twice the amount made from the crime, whichever is greater.” http://www.crime-research.org/news/27.08.2009/3750/

Malicious kids go to jail http://www.cybercrime.gov/cases.htm

◦ Kevin Mitnick and Robert Morris Federal cases database (only up to 2006)

http://www.justice.gov/criminal/cybercrime/cccases.html

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Ethics and Information Ethics and Information SecuritySecurityEthical issues of information security

professionals◦ Expected to be leaders in ethical workplace behavior◦ No binding professional code of ethics◦ Some professional organizations provide ethical

codes of conduct, Have no authority to banish violators from

professional practice.

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Cultural Differences and Cultural Differences and EthicsEthics Different nationalities have different perspectives on

computer ethics◦ Asian tradition - collective ownership◦ Western tradition - intellectual property rights

Study of computer use ethics among students in 9 nations◦ Singapore, Hong Kong, U.S., England, Australia, Sweden,

Wales, Netherlands◦ Studied 3 categories of use

software license infringement illicit use misuse of corporate resources

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Cultural Differences: Cultural Differences: Software License InfringementSoftware License Infringement

Most nations had similar attitudes toward software piracy◦ U.S.

significantly less tolerant (least tolerant)◦ Other countries

moderate higher piracy rates in Singapore/Hong Kong

may result from lack of legal disincentives or punitive measures

◦ Netherlands most permissive least likely to honor copyrights of content creators lower piracy rate than Singapore/Hong Kong

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Cultural Differences: Cultural Differences: Illicit Use of SoftwareIllicit Use of Software Viruses, hacking, other forms of abuse uniformly

condemned as unacceptable behavior. Singapore/Hong Kong

◦ most tolerant Sweden/Netherlands

◦ in-between U.S., Wales, England, Australia

◦ least tolerant

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Cultural Differences: Cultural Differences: Misuse of Corporate ResourcesMisuse of Corporate ResourcesGenerally lenient attitudes toward

◦ personal use of company computing resources.Singapore/Hong Kong

◦ viewed personal use as unethical (least tolerant)

Other countries ◦ Personal use acceptable if not specifically

prohibitedNetherlands

◦ most lenient

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Ethics and EducationEthics and Education Education

◦ overriding factor in leveling the ethical perceptions within a small population

◦ Employees must be trained and kept aware of topics related to information security, including expected ethical behaviors..

◦ Many employees may not have formal technical training to understand that their behavior is unethical or illegal.

Ethical and legal training is an essential key to developing informed, well-prepared, and low-risk system users.

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Deterrence to Unethical and Deterrence to Unethical and Illegal BehaviorIllegal Behavior Use policy, education, training, and

technology to protect information systems. 3 categories of unethical and illegal behavior

◦ Ignorance No excuse for violating law, but allowable for

policies. Use education, policies, training, awareness

programs to keep individuals aware of policies.

◦ Accident Use careful planning and control to prevent

accidental modifications to system and data.

◦ Intent Frequent cornerstone for prosecution. Best controls are litigation, prosecution, and

technical controls.22

DeterrenceDeterrence Best method to prevent illegal or unethical

activity.◦ Laws, policies, and technical controls

3 conditions required for effective deterrence◦ Fear of penalty

reprimand or warnings may not have the same effectiveness as imprisonment or loss of pay.

◦ Probability of being caught must believe there is a strong possibility of being

caught.◦ Probability of penalty being administered

must believe the penalty will be administered Note: threats don’t work --- penalties must be

realistic and enforceable.

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Codes of EthicsCodes of Ethics

Established by various professional organizations◦ Produce a positive effect on judgment regarding

computer use◦ Establishes responsibility of security professionals to

act ethically according to the policies and procedures of their

employers, professional organizations, and laws of society.

◦ Organizations assume responsibility to develop, disseminate, and enforce policies.

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Major IT Professional Major IT Professional Organizations and EthicsOrganizations and Ethics Association for Computing Machinery (ACM)

◦ promotes education and provides discounts for students◦ educational and scientific computing society

International Information Systems Security Certification Consortium (ISC2)◦ develops and implements information security certifications and

credentials System Administration, Networking, and Security Institute (SANS)

◦ Global Information Assurance Certifications (GIAC) Information Systems Audit and Control Association (ISACA)

◦ focus on auditing, control and security Computer Security Institute (CSI)

◦ sponsors education and training for information security Information Systems Security Association (ISSA)

◦ information exchange and educational development for information security practitioners

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Other Security Other Security OrganizationsOrganizations Internet Society (ISOC)

◦ develop education, standards, policy, and education and training to promote the Internet

Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF)◦ develops Internet's technical foundations

Computer Security Division (CSD) of National Institute for Standards and Technology (NIST)◦ Computer Security Resource Center (CSRC)

Computer Emergency Response Team (CERT)**◦ CERT Coordination Center (CERT/CC)◦ Carnegie Mellon University Software Engineering Institute

Computer Professionals for Social Responsibility (CPSR)◦ promotes ethical and responsible development and use of

computing◦ watchdog for development of ethical computing

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U.S. Federal Agencies Related to U.S. Federal Agencies Related to Information SecurityInformation Security Department of Homeland Security (DHS)

◦ Directorate of Information and Infrastructure discover and respond to attacks on national information

systems and critical infrastructure research and development of software and technology

◦ Science and Technology Directorate Research and development activities

examination of vulnerabilities sponsors emerging best practices

FBI National Infrastructure Protection Center (NIPC)◦ U.S. government center for threat assessment, warning,

investigation, and response to threats or attacks against U.S. infrastructures

◦ National InfraGard Program cooperative effort between public and private organizations and

academic community provides free exchange of information with private sector

regarding threats and attacks.

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U.S. Federal Agencies (2)U.S. Federal Agencies (2)

National Security Agency (NSA)**◦ U.S. cryptologic organization◦ Centers of Excellence in Information

Assurance Education recognition for universities/schools acknowledgment on NSA web site

◦ Program to certify curricula in information security Information Assurance Courseware Evaluation Provides 3 year accreditation

U.S. Secret Service◦ Part of Department of Treasury

◦ One mission is to detect and arrest any person committing U.S. federal offenses related to computer fraud and false identification crimes.

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