Diverse Books
News Science Fiction Computing Popular Science Horror
search Diverse Books:
 
 
Diverse Books
- About
- FAQ
- User Discussions
- User Journals
- Messages
- Genres
- Editors

- Preferences
- Older Stuff
- Past Polls
- Submit Review
- Submit News

- Reviews

Diverse Books
List
Authors
Titles
Reviewers
Genres
Publishers

Site News
Book Reviews
Books Published
Books Received
Events
Interviews
Competitions
XML/RSS headlines

General Information
4Reviewers

Mail Us

Other Stuff
Clubs&Societies
Conversation
Fandom
Interesting Links

Search  by Genre
Science Fiction
Fantasy
Computing
News
Adult
All Topics
Art
Awards
Book Sellers
Childrens
Crime
Fannish Activity
Graphic Novels
Horror
Humour
Interactive Fiction
Movies
Popular Science
Publishers

Diverse Books
Want to be kept informed?
Please register and set your preferences to request a newsletter

  REVIEW: "Frauds, Spies, and Lies", Fred Cohen
posted by Markus on Monday October 16, @06:39AM ( Printer Friendly Version.| Email this article)
Computing Robert Slade reviews Frauds, Spies and Lies by Fred Cohen, and finds it a cut above your average IS Security Book:
Over the years, lots of books have promised to teach us how to deal with social enginering, fraudulent practices, con jobs, deceit, and just plain old lies. There are the pedestrian warnings that it is dangerous out there, such as Barrett's "Bandits on the Information Superhighway". Or Mintz' listing of nasty Websites in "Web of Deception". Or the repetitive recounting of confidence games in Mitnick and Simon's "The Art of Deception". Generally these works retail similar stories, with little variation and even less analysis.

Cohen's slim volume is a bit different.


Over the years, lots of books have promised to teach us how to deal with social enginering, fraudulent practices, con jobs, deceit, and just plain old lies. There are the pedestrian warnings that it is dangerous out there, such as Barrett's "Bandits on the Information Superhighway" (cf. BKBOTISH.RVW). Or Mintz' listing of nasty Websites in "Web of Deception" (cf. BKWBDCPT.RVW). Or the repetitive recounting of confidence games in Mitnick and Simon's "The Art of Deception" (cf. BKARTDCP.RVW). Generally these works retail similar stories, with little variation and even less analysis.

Cohen's slim volume is a bit different.

Chapter one is a brief introduction to the structure of the book. Chapter two defines frauds, and then lists a huge series of variations on the theme. Many books that deal with the topic provide examples, but this exhausting (and nearly exhaustive) catalogue, even with minimal analysis, allows the reader to begin to see patterns and thus furnishes a useful alert for awareness of the issues, regardless of the student's background. (Fred, I wonder if you are entirely correct about 419 frauds.) The topic of deception, in chapter three, deals first with how we think, and what analytical mistakes we are likely to make. This preparation is augmented by examples of how fraudsters and confidence tricksters can use these errors. (An interesting addition is a section dealing with self-deception, in regard to the justifications scammers use.) Cohen's wit and humour are used to good effect in pointing out the absurdities of some of our thinking patterns. Most "spying" is not James Bond derring-do, and chapter four outlines the means that "HUMINT" (human intelligence) specialists use to obtain information, mostly in normal conversation. This material would be very useful in creating security awareness courses dealing with social engineering. Defence and counterintelligence is covered in chapter five. Chapter six leans more towards the countering of various types of frauds.

This is not your normal security book, but then typical security works have had remarkably little success in addressing this particular topic. Security professionals will find little new in these pages, but the aggregation of the variant frauds is, itself, useful. Certainly no specialized background is needed to approach the text: anyone can pick it up and get a good deal of useful security awareness from a perusal of chapter two alone. The size of the work should not be daunting for anyone, and the content is quite readable. (I must note that the typography and formatting creates a bit of a problem: the lack of "white space" can sometimes make section changes a bit hard to follow, despite the careful and clear numbering of sections and subsections.)

I'd recommend this book, particularly as bedtime reading for any security professional, and for those involved with security awareness programs. However, it should have a broader readership: any reasonably intelligent person will find something useful and helpful for building a safer and enlightened attitude to the dangers of this complex world.

Title: Frauds, Spies, and Lies
Author: Fred Cohen
Published: 2005
ISBN: 1-878109-36-7,
Price: USD29.95
Author URL: Fred dot Cohen at all dot net
Book URL: http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/1878109367/robsladesinterne
Topic: Computing
Topic: Security
Pages: 234

copyright Robert M. Slade, 2006 BKFRSPLI.RVW 20060710
======================
rslade@vcn.bc.ca slade@victoria.tc.ca rslade@computercrime.org
Dictionary of Information Security www.syngress.com/catalog/?pid=4150 http://victoria.tc.ca/techrev/rms.htm
Information Security Resources: http://www.ussecurityawareness.org
Security Awareness Group Founder: http://www.gideonrasmussen.com

You can hit the "Reply" button below to add your comments

(Site Under Development)

Hammond/Scull - Lord of the Rings: Reader's Companion - Review

 

 
Diverse Books Login
Nickname:

Password:

[ Create a new account ]

Register and Login to remove ads!

Related Links
  • Robert Slade
  • More on Computing
  • Also by Markus
  • REVIEW: "Frauds, Spies, and Lies", Fred Cohen | Login/Create an Account | Top | Search Discussion
    Threshold:
    The Fine Print: The following comments are owned by whoever posted them. We are not responsible for them in any way.

    Real wealth can only increase. -- R. Buckminster Fuller

    [ home | Submit news or review | older articles | past polls | faq | editors | preferences ]