
Certified Ethical Hacker (CEH) v12 312-50 Exam Guide
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There's a difference between a law and a standard or guideline. A standard is a document created through consensus and approved by a body that governs a particular industry. It is a foundation upon which common rules, guidelines, and activities for that particular environment stand.
Let's start with the basics.
Almost everybody that is involved with the credit card-processing process, including processors, merchants, issuers, and others, have to adhere to these standards in order to accept credit cards. These standards include the following:
This standard specifies the requirements for implementing, maintaining, establishing, and continually improving information security management systems within an organization. So, we're going to make sure that we establish security requirements and goals for the organization as far as security is concerned, and then we're going to make sure that we do so in a cost-effective manner. We are going to make sure that it also helps us with any type of compliance – whether it's regulations or laws – and we're going to make sure that we define a new information security management process as we evolve.
It also helps us to check the status of information security activities within the organization. It's also used by organizations to help us provide information security information to customers if need be.
If you are based in the US, you have probably had interaction with the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA). When you go to the doctor, or any type of medical professional, they always have a signed HIPAA form.
HIPAA provides federal protections for any individual's health information that's maintained or stored by any type of health company, medical professional, or hospital.
They have also laid out several rules for administrative, physical, and technical safeguards. This includes things such as electronic transactions and code set standards. Any transaction, including health claims, payment, remittance, claim status, authorizations, and payments, has to be secured – whether it's in motion, in storage, or at rest.
This establishes another standard to protect people's medical records and other personal health information, including who the health care provider is, what the health plan is, and so on – all this information has to be secure. It also gives us (the patients) the right to control our health information, including the right to look at, and actually get, a copy of our health records.
This rule requires appropriate physical, technical, and administrative safeguards to make sure that we have CIA of electronically protected health information.
This is basically ensuring that each employer has a national number that identifies them on all of the different transactions that may take place.
This contains provisions related to any type of compliance and investigation, as well as the possibility of imposing penalties for violations of any HIPAA rules.
This was created in 2002 to help protect the public and investors by adding additional accuracy and reliability when it comes to corporate disclosures. Now, unfortunately, this act actually doesn't go through and tell the organization how they must store their records. Instead, it describes the records that the organization must store and how long they must store them for.
The key requirements for SOX are organized into several titles, including the following:
The Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) incorporates two different treaties that were signed back in 1996 by the World Intellectual Property Organization. It helps to define the legal prohibition against circumventing any technical protection measures that are out there for copyright holders. You are not supposed to be able to rip a DVD because a given film company has rights to it. That's where the DMCA comes into play. It guards against copyright infringement.
The Federal Information Security Management Act (FISMA) was passed in 2002 and creates several different standards and guidelines that are required by congressional legislation. FISMA is a framework that's effective for information security controls that are out there. It includes things such as standards for categorizing information and information systems by the impact that that system or information would have on the business if it were breached. There's also a standard for minimizing security requirements for information and information systems, as well as some suggestions for us, because selecting security controls and assessing those security controls also gives us some suggestions for security authorization systems.
General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) is at a global level and went into effect in 2018. It's very stringent when it comes to privacy and security laws globally and carries some very hefty fines for anybody who violates it. While it is an EU-specific law, it has implications for services based all over the world that service geographies in the EU.
GDPR includes various protections and accountability principles:
The Data Protection Act (DPA) 2018 is a framework for data protection that came out of the UK, and it's designed to protect individuals when it comes to personal data – making sure that personal data is processed lawfully. It also talks about the rights that an organization may or may not have to different personal information. It also sets out different protection rules for law enforcement and how to handle data protection when it comes to other areas, such as national security or even defense.
Important Note
With this said, every country has its own laws and standards. Find out which laws and acts apply to you based on your location.
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