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ISACA Information Security Manager Exam Syllabus Topics:
| Topic | Details | Weights |
|---|
| Information Security Program Development and Management | -Develop and maintain an information security program that identifies, manages and protects the organization’s assets while aligning to information security strategy and business goals, thereby supporting an effective security posture. Task Statements - Establish and/or maintain the information security program in alignment with the information security strategy.
- Align the information security program with the operational objectives of other business functions (e.g., human resources [HR], accounting, procurement and IT) to ensure that the information security program adds value to and protects the business.
- Identify, acquire and manage requirements for internal and external resources to execute the information security program.
- Establish and maintain information security processes and resources (including people and technologies) to execute the information security program in alignment with the organization’s business goals.
- Establish, communicate and maintain organizational information security standards, guidelines, procedures and other documentation to guide and enforce compliance with information security policies.
- Establish, promote and maintain a program for information security awareness and training to foster an effective security culture.
- Integrate information security requirements into organizational processes (e.g., change control, mergers and acquisitions, system development, business continuity, disaster recovery) to maintain the organization’s security strategy.
- Integrate information security requirements into contracts and activities of third parties (e.g., joint ventures, outsourced providers, business partners, customers) and monitor adherence to established requirements in order to maintain the organization’s security strategy.
- Establish, monitor and analyze program management and operational metrics to evaluate the effectiveness and efficiency of the information security program.
- Compile and present reports to key stakeholders on the activities, trends and overall effectiveness of the IS program and the underlying business processes in order to communicate security performance.
Knowledge Statements - Knowledge of methods to align information security program requirements with those of other business functions
- Knowledge of methods to identify, acquire, manage and define requirements for internal and external resources
- Knowledge of current and emerging information security technologies and underlying concepts
- Knowledge of methods to design and implement information security controls
- Knowledge of information security processes and resources (including people and technologies) in alignment with the organization’s business goals and methods to apply them
- Knowledge of methods to develop information security standards, procedures and guidelines
- Knowledge of internationally recognized regulations, standards, frameworks and best practices related to information security program development and management
- Knowledge of methods to implement and communicate information security policies, standards, procedures and guidelines
- Knowledge of training, certifications and skill set development for information security personnel
- Knowledge of methods to establish and maintain effective information security awareness and training programs
- Knowledge of methods to integrate information security requirements into organizational processes (e.g., access management, change management, audit processes)
- Knowledge of methods to incorporate information security requirements into contracts, agreements and third-party management processes
- Knowledge of methods to monitor and review contracts and agreements with third parties and associated change processes as required
- Knowledge of methods to design, implement and report operational information security metrics
- Knowledge of methods for testing the effectiveness and efficiency of information security controls
- Knowledge of techniques to communicate information security program status to key stakeholders
| 27% |
| Information Risk Management | -Manage information risk to an acceptable level based on risk appetite in order to meet organizational goals and objectives. Task Statements - Establish and/or maintain a process for information asset classification to ensure that measures taken to protect assets are proportional to their business value.
- Identify legal, regulatory, organizational and other applicable requirements to manage the risk of noncompliance to acceptable levels.
- Ensure that risk assessments, vulnerability assessments and threat analyses are conducted consistently, at appropriate times, and to identify and assess risk to the organization’s information.
- Identify, recommend or implement appropriate risk treatment/response options to manage risk to acceptable levels based on organizational risk appetite.
- Determine whether information security controls are appropriate and effectively manage risk to an acceptable level.
- Facilitate the integration of information risk management into business and IT processes (e.g., systems development, procurement, project management) to enable a consistent and comprehensive information risk management program across the organization.
- Monitor for internal and external factors (e.g., key risk indicators [KRIs], threat landscape, geopolitical, regulatory change) that may require reassessment of risk to ensure that changes to existing, or new, risk scenarios are identified and managed appropriately.
- Report noncompliance and other changes in information risk to facilitate the risk management decision-making process.
- Ensure that information security risk is reported to senior management to support an understanding of potential impact on the organizational goals and objectives.
Knowledge Statements - Knowledge of methods to establish an information asset classification model consistent with business objectives.
- Knowledge of considerations for assigning ownership of information assets and risk.
- Knowledge of methods to identify and evaluate the impact of internal or external events on information assets and the business.
- Knowledge of methods used to monitor internal or external risk factors.
- Knowledge of information asset valuation methodologies.
- Knowledge of legal, regulatory, organizational and other requirements related to information security.
- Knowledge of reputable, reliable and timely sources of information regarding emerging information security threats and vulnerabilities.
- Knowledge of events that may require risk reassessments and changes to information security program elements.
- Knowledge of information threats, vulnerabilities and exposures and their evolving nature.
- Knowledge of risk assessment and analysis methodologies.
- Knowledge of methods used to prioritize risk scenarios and risk treatment/response options.
- Knowledge of risk reporting requirements (e.g., frequency, audience, content).
- Knowledge of risk treatment/response options (avoid, mitigate, accept or transfer) and methods to apply them.
- Knowledge of control baselines and standards and their relationships to risk assessments.
- Knowledge of information security controls and the methods to analyze their effectiveness.
- Knowledge of gap analysis techniques as related to information security.
- Knowledge of techniques for integrating information security risk management into business and IT processes.
- Knowledge of compliance reporting requirements and processes.
- Knowledge of cost/benefit analysis to assess risk treatment options.
| 30% |
| Information Security Governance | -Establish and/or maintain an information security governance framework and supporting processes to ensure that the information security strategy is aligned with organizational goals and objectives. Task Statements - Establish and/or maintain an information security strategy in alignment with organizational goals and objectives to guide the establishment and/or ongoing management of the information security program.
- Establish and/or maintain an information security governance framework to guide activities that support the information security strategy.
- Integrate information security governance into corporate governance to ensure that organizational goals and objectives are supported by the information security program.
- Establish and maintain information security policies to guide the development of standards, procedures and guidelines in alignment with enterprise goals and objectives.
- Develop business cases to support investments in information security.
- Identify internal and external influences to the organization (e.g., emerging technologies, social media, business environment, risk tolerance, regulatory requirements, third-party considerations, threat landscape) to ensure that these factors are continually addressed by the information security strategy.
- Gain ongoing commitment from senior leadership and other stakeholders to support the successful implementation of the information security strategy.
- Define, communicate, and monitor information security responsibilities throughout the organization (e.g., data owners, data custodians, end-users, privileged or high-risk users) and lines of authority.
- Establish, monitor, evaluate and report key information security metrics to provide management with accurate and meaningful information regarding the effectiveness of the information security strategy.
Knowledge Statements - Knowledge of techniques used to develop an information security strategy (e.g., SWOT [strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, threats] analysis, gap analysis, threat research)
- Knowledge of the relationship of information security to business goals, objectives, functions, processes and practices.
- Knowledge of available information security governance frameworks.
- Knowledge of globally recognized standards, frameworks and industry best practices related to information security governance and strategy development.
- Knowledge of the fundamental concepts of governance and how they relate to information security.
- Knowledge of methods to assess, plan, design and implement an information security governance framework.
- Knowledge of methods to integrate information security governance into corporate governance.
- Knowledge of contributing factors and parameters (e.g., organizational structure and culture, tone at the top, regulations) for information security policy development
- Knowledge of content in, and techniques to develop, business cases.
- Knowledge of strategic budgetary planning and reporting methods.
- Knowledge of the internal and external influences to the organization (e.g., emerging technologies, social media, business environment, risk tolerance, regulatory requirements, third-party considerations, threat landscape) and how they impact the information security strategy.
- Knowledge of key information needed to obtain commitment from senior leadership and support from other stakeholders (e.g., how information security supports organizational goals and objectives, criteria for determining successful implementation, business impact).
- Knowledge of methods and considerations for communicating with senior leadership and other stakeholders (e.g., organizational culture, channels of communication, highlighting essential aspects of information security).
- Knowledge of roles and responsibilities of the information security manager.
- Knowledge of organizational structures, lines of authority and escalation points.
- Knowledge of information security responsibilities of staff across the organization (e.g., data owners, end-users, privileged or high-risk users)
- Knowledge of processes to monitor performance of information security responsibilities.
- Knowledge of methods to establish new, or utilize existing, reporting and communication channels throughout an organization.
- Knowledge of methods to select, implement and interpret key information security metrics (e.g., key performance indicators [KPIs] or key risk indicators [KRIs]).
| 24% |
| Information Security Incident Management | -Plan, establish and manage the capability to detect, investigate, respond to and recover from information security incidents to minimize business impact. Task Statements - Establish and maintain an organizational definition of, and severity hierarchy for, information security incidents to allow accurate classification and categorization of and response to incidents.
- Establish and maintain an incident response plan to ensure an effective and timely response to information security incidents.
- Develop and implement processes to ensure the timely identification of information security incidents that could impact the business.
- Establish and maintain processes to investigate and document information security incidents in order to determine the appropriate response and cause while adhering to legal, regulatory and organizational requirements.
- Establish and maintain incident notification and escalation processes to ensure that the appropriate stakeholders are involved in incident response management.
- Organize, train and equip incident response teams to respond to information security incidents in an effective and timely manner.
- Test, review and revise (as applicable) the incident response plan periodically to ensure an effective response to information security incidents and to improve response capabilities.
- Establish and maintain communication plans and processes to manage communication with internal and external entities.
- Conduct post-incident reviews to determine the root cause of information security incidents, develop corrective actions, reassess risk, evaluate response effectiveness and take appropriate remedial actions.
- Establish and maintain integration among the incident response plan, business continuity plan and disaster recovery plan.
Knowledge Statements - Knowledge of incident management concepts and practices.
- Knowledge of the components of an incident response plan.
- Knowledge of business continuity planning (BCP) and disaster recovery planning (DRP) and their relationship to the incident response plan.
- Knowledge of incident classification/categorization methods.
- Knowledge of incident containment methods to minimize adverse operational impact.
- Knowledge of notification and escalation processes.
- Knowledge of the roles and responsibilities in identifying and managing information security incidents.
- Knowledge of the types and sources of training, tools and equipment required to adequately equip incident response teams.
- Knowledge of forensic requirements and capabilities for collecting, preserving and presenting evidence (e.g., admissibility, quality and completeness of evidence, chain of custody).
- Knowledge of internal and external incident reporting requirements and procedures.
- Knowledge of post-incident review practices and investigative methods to identify root causes and determine corrective actions.
- Knowledge of techniques to quantify damages, costs and other business impacts arising from information security incidents.
- Knowledge of technologies and processes to detect, log, analyze and document information security events.
- Knowledge of internal and external resources available to investigate information security incidents.
- Knowledge of methods to identify and quantify the potential impact of changes made to the operating environment during the incident response process.
- Knowledge of techniques to test the incident response plan.
- Knowledge of applicable regulatory, legal and organization requirements.
- Knowledge of key indicators/metrics to evaluate the effectiveness of the incident response plan.
| 19% |
NEW QUESTION 509
An organization with multiple data centers has designated one of its own facilities as the recovery site. The MOST important concern is the:
- A. current processing capacity loads at data centers.
- B. differences in logical security at each center.
- C. synchronization of system software release versions.
- D. communication line capacity between data centers.
Answer: A
Explanation:
Explanation/Reference:
Explanation:
If data centers are operating at or near capacity, it may prove difficult to recover critical operations at an alternate data center. Although line capacity is important from a mirroring perspective, this is secondary to having the necessary capacity to restore critical systems. By comparison, differences in logical and physical security and synchronization of system software releases are much easier issues to overcome and are, therefore, of less concern.
NEW QUESTION 510
The risk of mishandling alerts identified by an intrusion detection system (IDS) would be the GREATEST when:
- A. the IT infrastructure is diverse.
- B. operations and monitoring are handled by different teams.
- C. IDS sensors are misconfigured.
- D. standard operating procedures are not formalized.
Answer: D
Explanation:
Section: INFORMATION RISK MANAGEMENT
NEW QUESTION 511
A border router should be placed on which of the following?
- A. Domain boundary
- B. Screened subnet
- C. IDS server
- D. Web server
Answer: A
Explanation:
A border router should be placed on a (security) domain boundary. Placing it on a web server or screened subnet, which is a demilitarized zone (DMZ) would not provide any protection. Border routers are positioned on the boundary of the network, but do not reside on a server.
NEW QUESTION 512
In the course of responding 10 an information security incident, the BEST way to treat evidence for possible legal action is defined by:
- A. organizational security policies.
- B. local regulations.
- C. international standards.
- D. generally accepted best practices.
Answer: B
Explanation:
Legal follow-up will most likely be performed locally where the incident took place; therefore, it is critical that the procedure of treating evidence is in compliance with local regulations. In certain countries, there are strict regulations on what information can be collected. When evidence collected is not in compliance with local regulations, it may not be admissible in court. There are no common regulations to treat computer evidence that are accepted internationally. Generally accepted best practices such as a common chain-of-custody concept may have different implementation in different countries, and thus may not be a good assurance that evidence will be admissible. Local regulations always take precedence over organizational security policies.
NEW QUESTION 513
A team developing an interface to a key financial system has identified a security flaw in one of the libraries.
Remediating the flaw would require major system redesign. What should the information security manager do NEXT?
- A. Instruct the development team to remediate the flaw.
- B. Confirm the impact with the business owner.
- C. Conduct a comprehensive source code review.
- D. Hire a consultant to design proper remediation controls.
Answer: B
NEW QUESTION 514
When speaking to an organization's human resources department about information security, an information security manager should focus on the need for:
- A. recruitment of technical IT employees.
- B. periodic risk assessments.
- C. an adequate budget for the security program.
- D. security awareness training for employees.
Answer: D
Explanation:
Explanation
An information security manager has to impress upon the human resources department the need for security awareness training for all employees. Budget considerations are more of an accounting function. The human resources department would become involved once they are convinced for the need of security awareness training. Recruiting IT-savvy staff may bring in new employees with better awareness of information security, but that is not a replacement for the training requirements of the other employees. Periodic risk assessments may or may not involve the human resources department function.
NEW QUESTION 515
Which of the following activities is MOST likely to increase the difficulty of totally eradicating malicious code that is not immediately detected?
- A. Applying patches
- B. Changing access rules
- C. Upgrading hardware
- D. Backing up files
Answer: D
Explanation:
Section: INFORMATION SECURITY PROGRAM MANAGEMENT
Explanation:
If malicious code is not immediately detected, it will most likely be backed up as a part of the normal tape backup process. When later discovered, the code may be eradicated from the device but still remain undetected ON a backup tape. Any subsequent restores using that tape may reintroduce the malicious code.
Applying patches, changing access rules and upgrading hardware does not significantly increase the level of difficulty.
NEW QUESTION 516
Which of the following roles is PRIMARILY responsible for determining the information classification levels for a given information asset?
- A. Custodian
- B. User
- C. Manager
- D. Owner
Answer: D
Explanation:
Explanation/Reference:
Explanation:
Although the information owner may be in a management position and is also considered a user, the information owner role has the responsibility for determining information classification levels. Management is responsible for higher-level issues such as providing and approving budget, supporting activities, etc.
The information custodian is responsible for day-to-day security tasks such as protecting information, backing up information, etc. Users are the lowest level. They use the data, but do not classify the data. The owner classifies the data.
NEW QUESTION 517
An organization involved in e-commerce activities operating from its home country opened a new office in another country wit! stringent security laws. In this scenario, the overall security strategy should be based on:
- A. the security organization structure
- B. the most stringent requirements.
- C. international security standards.
- D. risk assessment results.
Answer: B
NEW QUESTION 518
Which of the following is MOST critical for prioritizing actions in a business continuity plan (BCP)?
- A. Asset classification
- B. Business impact analysis (BIA)
- C. Business process mapping
- D. Risk assessment
Answer: B
NEW QUESTION 519
An advantage of antivirus software schemes based on change detection is that they have:
- A. the highest probability of avoiding false alarms.
- B. a more flexible directory of viral signatures.
- C. to be updated less frequently than activity monitors.
- D. a chance of detecting current and future viral strains.
Answer: D
NEW QUESTION 520
Establishing which of the following is the BEST way of ensuring that the emergence of new risk is promptly identified?
- A. Incident monitoring activities
- B. Change control procedures
- C. Regular risk repotting
- D. Risk monitoring processes
Answer: D
NEW QUESTION 521
Which of the following should be the PRIMARY consideration for an information security manager when designing security controls for a newly acquired business application?
- A. Known vulnerabilities in the application
- B. Cost-benefit analysis of current controls
- C. The IT security architecture framework
- D. Business processes supported by the application
Answer: B
NEW QUESTION 522
Which of the following is the MOST important requirement for setting up an information security infrastructure for a new system?
- A. Performing a business impact analysis (BIA)
- B. Initiating IT security training and familiarization
- C. Basing the information security infrastructure on risk assessment
- D. Considering personal information devices as pan of the security policy
Answer: C
Explanation:
Section: INFORMATION RISK MANAGEMENT
Explanation:
The information security infrastructure should be based on risk. While considering personal information devices as part of the security policy may be a consideration, it is not the most important requirement. A BIA is typically carried out to prioritize business processes as part of a business continuity plan. Initiating IT security training may not be important for the purpose of the information security infrastructure.
NEW QUESTION 523
An organization utilizes a third party to classify its customers' personally identifiable information (PII). What is the BEST way to hold the third party accountable for data leaks?
- A. Include detailed documentation requirements within the formal statement of work.
- B. Require the service provider to sign off on the organization's acceptable use policy.
- C. Ensure a nondisclosure agreement is signed by both parties' senior management.
- D. Submit a formal request for proposal (RFP) containing detailed documentation of requirements.
Answer: A
NEW QUESTION 524
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