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DHS offers baseline for U.S. IT security skills

By Brian Robinson
Published on October 10, 2007

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Related story links

EBK Federal Register notice

EBK 2007 draft (.pdf)

DOD, Intell teams go to work on certification, accreditation

Contractors should comply with DOD security training rules


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The Homeland Security Department recently published a draft of a framework of knowledge and skills it believes the United States needs to prevent cyberattacks.

Development of the “IT Security Essential Body of Knowledge” (EBK) began in 2003, when the DHS National Cyber Security Division (NCSD) began working with the Defense Department, academia and private industry to examine workforce IT certifications and what would be needed to advance security skills.

Starting with the DOD’s “Information Assurance Skill Standards” document, which had goals considered close to those for the national workforce, the NCSD development team isolated what it considered the core IT security competencies.

It then compared those with other domain-based IT security models to come up with a list of 14 key competencies to cover all public and private security roles and functions.

The EBK contains the key terms and concepts from all of those competencies that NCSD officials feel individuals in at least some IT security roles should know.

The EBK is not an additional set of guidelines that DHS believes organizations should follow, said Greg Garcia, DHS’ assistant secretary for cybersecurity and communications, in comments included with the recent Federal Register announcement of the EBK draft. It is also not intended to represent a directive from DHS, he said.

The intent is for the document “to help advance the IT security training and certification landscape as we strive to ensure that we have the most qualified and appropriately trained IT security workforce possible,” he said.

The public can comment on EBK through the Federal Register notice. Those comments will build on initial reviews by working groups and role-based focus groups prior to the document’s final publication.

The deadline for those comments is Dec. 7.



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