The CSO Book of Lists
Lists on network security, fraud, loss prevention, leadership, curious acronyms, shark attacks, bizarre thefts, and so much more.
By Derek Slater
December 01, 2006 — CSO —
I am not a listaholic exactly, but there's no question that a nice checklist can save the day. I can't
go to the grocery store without a shopping list, for example, or else we wind up having dinners like
Roast Chicken with No Side Dishes, or Pasta with Nearly Marinara Sauce.
The Book of Lists—not the issue you're reading, but the one that's actually a book—was
published in 1977 by Irving Wallace and his kids, David Wallechinsky and Amy Wallace. The kids have
periodically updated it with new editions and somewhere along the way, it picked up the subtitle The
Original Compendium of Useless Information, presumably because other people saw the book's success
and ripped off the format for books—or magazines—of their own.
They're not kidding with that subtitle. Plenty of the material in the original book is genuinely useless. It
includes such lists as:
- Shoe sizes of famous people
- The 15 most boring classics
- People misquoted by Ronald Reagan
While we've borrowed their format (though I prefer to call this issue "an homage"), we've tried to keep
our own Book of Lists light on the useless stuff—even though useless lists are often the most
fascinating to read. What we hope you'll find here instead is eminently useful information on a broad
range of security topics, including:
- Metrics (good and bad)
- Emerging technologies and vulnerabilities
- Fraud
- Global threats
- Data breach litigation
- Business continuity exercises
- Starting a new job
(We did try to sprinkle in just enough useless-but-fascinating stuff to make good vacation reading too.)
My favorite list in this issue is "How to Build a Surveillance Camera System" (Page 36). It's ridiculously
useful, and also it's what we call found material. We didn't plan on it; we didn't ask for it. Senior Editor
Scott Berinato, who spearheaded the entire issue and whom I would describe as a listaholic, e-mailed a
bunch of questions to a bunch of CSOs. Instead of answering our questions, one gent sent us this
detailed camera plan—plus even more information we couldn't fit into the
magazine—"because it's top of mind."
What's your favorite list in this issue? And what did we miss that's top of mind for you? Maybe we
should do a second edition next year. Let us know.
Read more about data protection in CSOonline's Data Protection section.
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