Title
Managing secure survivable critical infrastructures to avoid vulnerabilities
Abstract
Information systems now form the backbone of nearly every government and private system - from targeting weapons to conducting financial transactions. Increasingly these systems are networked together allowing for distributed operations, sharing of databases, and redundant capability. Ensuring these networks are secure, robust, and reliable is critical for the strategic and economic well being of the Nation. The blackout of August 14, 2003 affected 8 states and fifty million people and could cost up to $5 billion. The DOE/NERC interim reports indicate the outage progressed as a chain of relatively minor events consistent with previous cascading outages caused by a domino reaction. The increasing use of embedded distributed systems to manage and control our technologically complex society makes knowing the vulnerability of such systems essential to improving their intrinsic reliability/survivability. Our discussion employs the power transmission grid.
Year
DOI
Venue
2004
10.1109/HASE.2004.1281767
HASE
Keywords
Field
DocType
robustness,computer networks,information system,spine,distributed system,government,power transmission,management information systems,distributed databases,information systems,critical infrastructure,distributed programming,system management
Information system,Survivability,Computer security,Computer science,Financial transaction,Blackout,Power transmission,Grid,Reliability engineering,Vulnerability,Government
Conference
ISBN
Citations 
PageRank 
0-7695-2094-4
4
0.62
References 
Authors
8
5
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Frederick Sheldon18616.46
Thomas E. Potok236834.84
Andy Loebl340.62
Axel W. Krings416322.20
Paul W. Oman555255.33