JSSS 2020
DOI: 10.20517/jsss.2020.08
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Resilience properties and metrics: how far have we gone?

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Cited by 6 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…[31]. Other works such as [8] provide a more exhaustive classification of resilience definitions found in the literature, depending on systems properties, service delivery, and events handling. According to [9], it is possible to highlight the main principles of resilience as: (i) Anticipate, i.e., maintain a state of informed preparedness to forestall compromises of mission functions from adversarial activities; (ii) Withstand, i.e., continue essential mission/business functions despite successful execution of an attack by an adversary; (iii) Recover, i.e., restore mission/business functions to the maximum extent possible after the successful execution of an attack by an adversary; and (iv) Adapt, i.e., change the mission functions or the supporting cyber capabilities to minimize adverse impacts from actual or predicted attacks.…”
Section: Cyber-resilience a Consensus For A Definitionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…[31]. Other works such as [8] provide a more exhaustive classification of resilience definitions found in the literature, depending on systems properties, service delivery, and events handling. According to [9], it is possible to highlight the main principles of resilience as: (i) Anticipate, i.e., maintain a state of informed preparedness to forestall compromises of mission functions from adversarial activities; (ii) Withstand, i.e., continue essential mission/business functions despite successful execution of an attack by an adversary; (iii) Recover, i.e., restore mission/business functions to the maximum extent possible after the successful execution of an attack by an adversary; and (iv) Adapt, i.e., change the mission functions or the supporting cyber capabilities to minimize adverse impacts from actual or predicted attacks.…”
Section: Cyber-resilience a Consensus For A Definitionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Some of these are defined in familiar information and cyber security frameworks, standards and guidelines, such as COBIT and ISO 27001 (Baskerville et al , 2014). However, most of these are prevention-oriented based on historical risk analysis data (Clédel et al , 2020; Gasser et al , 2019). This approach is proving to be less ideal in the face of today’s more dynamic threat scenario (Baskerville et al , 2014).…”
Section: Critical Infrastructure Cybersecuritymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although the resilience and survivability paradigms have been extensively explored, there are still questions left unanswered and discoveries left for future studies [16]. There has been a slight agreement among scholars on what resilience and survivability mean in terms of universal practice.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%