The dotCrime Manifesto

How to Stop Internet Crime

Nonfiction, Computers, Networking & Communications
Cover of the book The dotCrime Manifesto by Phillip Hallam-Baker, Pearson Education
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Author: Phillip Hallam-Baker ISBN: 9780132701976
Publisher: Pearson Education Publication: December 29, 2007
Imprint: Addison-Wesley Professional Language: English
Author: Phillip Hallam-Baker
ISBN: 9780132701976
Publisher: Pearson Education
Publication: December 29, 2007
Imprint: Addison-Wesley Professional
Language: English

Internet crime keeps getting worse...but it doesn’t have to be that way. In this book, Internet security pioneer Phillip Hallam-Baker shows how we can make the Internet far friendlier for honest people—and far less friendly to criminals.

 

The dotCrime Manifesto begins with a revealing new look at the challenge of Internet crime—and a surprising look at today’s Internet criminals. You’ll discover why the Internet’s lack of accountability makes it so vulnerable, and how this can be fixed —technically, politically, and culturally.

 

Hallam-Baker introduces tactical, short-term measures for countering phishing, botnets, spam, and other forms of Internet crime. Even more important, he presents a comprehensive plan for implementing accountability-driven security infrastructure: a plan that draws on tools that are already available, and rapidly emerging standards and products. The result: a safer Internet that doesn’t sacrifice what people value most: power, ubiquity, simplicity, flexibility, or privacy.

 

Tactics and strategy: protecting Internet infrastructure from top to bottom

Building more secure transport, messaging, identities, networks, platforms, and more

 

Gaining safety without sacrificing the Internet’s unique power and value

Making the Internet safer for honest people without sacrificing ubiquity, simplicity, or privacy

 

Spam: draining the swamp, once and for all

Why spam contributes to virtually every form of Internet crime—and what we can do about it

 

Design for deployment: how to really make it happen

Defining security objectives, architecture, strategy, and design—and evangelizing them

 

 

 

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

Internet crime keeps getting worse...but it doesn’t have to be that way. In this book, Internet security pioneer Phillip Hallam-Baker shows how we can make the Internet far friendlier for honest people—and far less friendly to criminals.

 

The dotCrime Manifesto begins with a revealing new look at the challenge of Internet crime—and a surprising look at today’s Internet criminals. You’ll discover why the Internet’s lack of accountability makes it so vulnerable, and how this can be fixed —technically, politically, and culturally.

 

Hallam-Baker introduces tactical, short-term measures for countering phishing, botnets, spam, and other forms of Internet crime. Even more important, he presents a comprehensive plan for implementing accountability-driven security infrastructure: a plan that draws on tools that are already available, and rapidly emerging standards and products. The result: a safer Internet that doesn’t sacrifice what people value most: power, ubiquity, simplicity, flexibility, or privacy.

 

Tactics and strategy: protecting Internet infrastructure from top to bottom

Building more secure transport, messaging, identities, networks, platforms, and more

 

Gaining safety without sacrificing the Internet’s unique power and value

Making the Internet safer for honest people without sacrificing ubiquity, simplicity, or privacy

 

Spam: draining the swamp, once and for all

Why spam contributes to virtually every form of Internet crime—and what we can do about it

 

Design for deployment: how to really make it happen

Defining security objectives, architecture, strategy, and design—and evangelizing them

 

 

 

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