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Defense in depth
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Revision as of 21:31, 23 May 2008 by Cduffey346 (talk | contribs) (Began the conforming the article to the Principles Template)
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Description
The principle of defense in depth suggests that where one control would be reasonable, more controls that approach risks in different fashions are better. Controls, when used in depth, can make severe vulnerabilities extraordinarily difficult to exploit and thus unlikely to occur.
With secure coding, this may take the form of tier-based validation, centralized auditing controls, and requiring users to be logged on all pages.
Examples
Vulnerable Administrative Interface
- A flawed administrative interface is unlikely to be vulnerable to anonymous attack if it correctly gates access to production management networks, checks for administrative user authorization, and logs all access.