CRJan 9, 2019

Risk analysis beyond vulnerability and resilience - characterizing the defensibility of critical systems

arXiv:1901.07313v129 citations
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This work addresses the need for more actionable risk analysis tools for policymakers and analysts managing critical infrastructure, though it appears incremental as it builds on existing indices.

The authors tackled the problem of insufficient existing indices for guiding security investments in critical systems by proposing a new dimensionless index called defensibility, which measures how much damage reduction can be achieved with modest investment, and provided analytical results to illustrate its dependencies on factors like asset valuations and threat types.

A common problem in risk analysis is to characterize the overall security of a system of valuable assets (e.g., government buildings or communication hubs), and to suggest measures to mitigate any hazards or security threats. Currently, analysts typically rely on a combination of indices, such as resilience, robustness, redundancy, security, and vulnerability. However, these indices are not by themselves sufficient as a guide to action; for example, while it is possible to develop policies to decrease vulnerability, such policies may not always be cost-effective. Motivated by this gap, we propose a new index, defensibility. A system is considered defensible to the extent that a modest investment can significantly reduce the damage from an attack or disruption. To compare systems whose performance is not readily commensurable (e.g., the electrical grid vs. the water-distribution network, both of which are critical, but which provide distinct types of services), we defined defensibility as a dimensionless index. After defining defensibility quantitatively, we illustrate how the defensibility of a system depends on factors such as the defender and attacker asset valuations, the nature of the threat (whether intelligent and adaptive, or random), and the levels of attack and defense strengths and provide analytical results that support the observations arising from the above illustrations. Overall, we argue that the defensibility of a system is an important dimension to consider when evaluating potential defensive investments, and that it can be applied in a variety of different contexts.

Foundations

The foundational work for this paper's niche, ranked by how specifically the neighbourhood builds on it — not by global fame.

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