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4 Reviews
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
An Excellent introduction,
By A Customer
This review is from: Peter Norton's Network Security Fundamentals (Paperback)
This is an extremely useful primer on network security. After looking through a number of books, I chose this one as a starting point because of its clear organization and language.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
useful book,
By A Customer
This review is from: Peter Norton's Network Security Fundamentals (Paperback)
As a more novice reader, I found this book to be very informative, practical and clearly written. I learned a great deal of information that I could directly apply to my work and home computing. I was amazed at the simple and practical tools available to every computer user which are not implemented to protect network security.
3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
A good introduction to network security fundamentals,
By Joe Buchberger (Tampa, FL United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Peter Norton's Network Security Fundamentals (Paperback)
As this book points out numerous times, network security is really a trade off between convenience (wide open with no restrictions) and safety (totally locked down to where no one has access). How this trade off is accomplished in today's typical networking environment is covered quite clearly and concisely in this short book.Things I liked were the organization and explanation of each of the common security tools available, such as firewalls, third party authentication and VPN's, with clear discussions of the inherent advantages and disadvantages of each, as well as the authors recommendations on where each should reside on the network. The authors provide great references for additional resources on areas outside the scope of this book also, such as websites, organizations and user groups where more exhaustive information may be obtained. What I found annoying was the boilerplate assembly process used throughout much of the book, where the exact paragraph or group of paragraphs as well as example figures, was replicated whenever a topic overlapped. For example, the discussion of smart cards came up in chapter 5, "Letting Users Connect Securely", along with a cute diagram of one style of hardware security token, and then again in chapter 6, "About Authentication and Passwords" we are treated to the exact same set of four or five paragraphs along with the very same example diagram. Overall though, this is a very informative, if short (at only 232 pages), introduction to the subject of network security. Perhaps a better title would have been "Peter Norton's *Introduction* to Network Security Fundamentals."
2 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
Helpful, but very repetetive,
By
This review is from: Peter Norton's Network Security Fundamentals (Paperback)
The book has good information and is clearly written, but much of the information is repeated from section to section. The author covers security in one OS, then copied and pasted paragraphs at a time into security about another OS. Very annoying to re-read sections over and over. There is one two paragraph pasage that I have read five times in different parts of the book.
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Peter Norton's Network Security Fundamentals by Peter Norton (Paperback - November 19, 1999)
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