Comments:"Security Engineering - A Guide to Building Dependable Distributed Systems"
URL:http://www.cl.cam.ac.uk/~rja14/book.html
All chapters from the second edition now available free online!
When I wrote the first edition, we put the chapters online free after four years and found that this boosted sales of the paper edition. People would find a useful chapter online and then buy the book to have it as a reference. Wiley and I agreed to do the same with the second edition, and now, four years after publication, I am putting all the chapters online for free. Enjoy them – and I hope you'll buy the paper version to have as a conveient shelf reference:
Here are the errata for the second edition, and here's a page of notes and links concerning relevant topics that I've come across since publication.
Supplementary materials: If you're a college professor thinking of using my book in class, note that we use my book in three courses at Cambridge:
I hope you find these useful. You're welcome to use and adapt any of my slides if you wish under this Creative Commons license. Also, if you're an instructor at an accredited institution, you can request an evaluation copy via Wiley's website.The first edition (2001)
You can also download all of the first edition for free:
The foreword, preface and other front matter
What is Security Engineering? Protocols Passwords Access Control Cryptography Distributed Systems Multilevel Security Multilateral Security Banking and Bookkeeping Monitoring Systems Nuclear Command and Control Security Printing and Seals Biometrics Physical Tamper Resistance Emission Security Electronic and Information Warfare Telecom System Security Network Attack and Defense Protecting E-Commerce Systems Copyright and Privacy Protection E-Policy Management Issues System Evaluation and Assurance Conclusions Bibliography Finally, here's a single pdf of the whole book. It's 17Mb, but a number of people asked me for it.My goal in making the first edition freely available five years after publication was twofold. First, I wanted to reach the widest possible audience, especially among poor students. Second, I am a pragmatic libertarian on free culture and free software issues; I think that many publishers (especially of music and software) are too defensive of copyright. (My colleague David MacKay found that putting his book on coding theory online actually helped its sales. Book publishers are getting the message faster than the music or software folks.) I expect to put the whole second edition online too in a few years.
If you own the first edition of my book, I hope you liked it enough to upgrade to the second edition. I also have online errata for the first editionhere.
Following enquiries from blind students, Jose C. Lacal has contributed these MP3 files of the first edition:preface, chapter 1,chapter 2,chapter 3,chapter 4,chapter 6, andchapter 7.
Where to buy the second edition
There are reviews of the first edition, which was translated into Japanese, Chinese and Polish.
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