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Cumulative Effect: Cyber Security Guide for Directors and CEOs: Security, Audit and Leadership Series

Autor Vladas Leonas
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 8 apr 2026
For years, cyber security was the ‘poor relation’ in many boardrooms: treated as inferior to other priorities, seen as an irritating cost centre and assumed to be money that could be spent ‘better’ elsewhere. That mindset is rarely the result of a single bad decision. It is inertia, the cumulative effect of multiple factors and, above all, a lack of understanding of how dramatically the landscape has changed over the past 25 years.
This book is written as a practical wake-up call for Board Members and CEOs. It reframes cyber security as a leadership issue rooted in the inherent insecurities of the internet on which modern organisations are built, encouraging leaders to think as if they operate in a high-crime area. It then shows how to translate that mindset into board-level oversight: strengthening domain and subdomain controls and certificate management, expanding organisational KPIs to include correctly chosen cyber measures (such as year-on-year reduction in IT ecosystem complexity) and making explicit decisions about unmanaged devices such as BYOD and home computers.
The book also introduces a ‘cyber security risk-reward’ lens for business cases, reshaping how leaders assess digital transformation, agile delivery, SaaS sprawl and shadow IT. It clarifies shared security responsibility and how to implement and manage it properly, then broadens the conversation to supply chain cyber risks and dependencies across all vendors and service providers, not just IT. It highlights the strategic importance of DNS ownership and management, examines the cyber implications of reliance on ‘digital monopolies’ such as Microsoft or CrowdStrike and makes clear that compliance does not equal security: standards and frameworks may help, but they do not guarantee real security. Finally, it tackles modern boardroom pressure points, including avoiding FOMO-driven decisions, assessing AI adoption through a cyber risk lens and planning for post-quantum cryptography.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781041220749
ISBN-10: 104122074X
Pagini: 204
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 mm
Greutate: 0.38 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: CRC Press
Colecția CRC Press
Seria Security, Audit and Leadership Series


Public țintă

Professional Practice & Development, Professional Reference, and Professional Training

Cuprins

1. Cumulative effect, 2. CIA, risk appetite, and risk exposure, 3. The fifth column, 4. Complexity tax, 5. Digital revolution (and its consequences), 6. Agile curse, 7. Cloud: Who owns the breach?, 8. SaaS sprawl, 9. Supply chain challenges, 10. The fifth column just got bigger: Internet protocols, 11. Compliance ≠ Security, 12. Standards and frameworks, 13. Tyranny of KPIs, 14. Gone phishing, 15. Emerging threats

Recenzii

Dr. Vladas Leonas has written a book that should be read by directors, CEOs, insurers, senior operators, and anyone responsible for cyber governance.
Cumulative Effect: Cyber Security Guide for Directors and CEOs addresses a problem that is still widely misunderstood. Cyber exposure rarely arises from one spectacular failure. It builds through the accumulation of dependencies, assumptions, shortcuts, unmanaged components, cloud services, SaaS platforms, third-party providers, APIs, certificates, domains, and gaps between what an organisation believes it has governed and what actually exists.
After three years of listening to Andy J. Jenkinson and reading the reams of evidence he has assembled, I have come to understand DNS and PKI as the nucleolus of the problem. They sit beneath the public trust layer on which digital commerce, communications, identity, insurance, governance, and institutional credibility increasingly depend. A weak or unmanaged foundation can quietly compromise the value of higher-order controls, certifications, policies, assurance statements, and cyber-insurance assumptions.
Dr. Leonas’s contribution is to place those foundations inside the larger cumulative reality: escalating complexity, cloud and SaaS dependence, supply-chain opacity, fragile accountability, and the persistent distance between compliance and actual security.
Most compliance processes begin with what an organisation says about itself. Policies, questionnaires, control statements, certifications, and internal attestations all have a place. Their value increases substantially when they are grounded in independently observable evidence of the actual condition of the environment.
That is the premise behind Whitethorn: an evidence-led assurance layer capable of examining the public-facing trust infrastructure of an organisation, including domains, subdomains, DNS, certificates, and associated conditions. The aim is to give boards, operators, insurers, and underwriters a more factual starting point for governance, remediation, risk pricing, and accountability.
Cyber governance becomes more credible when it begins with observable condition rather than declared confidence.
Dr. Leonas has provided a clear and valuable framework for understanding why that shift is overdue.
Brian Walls, Founder & CEO

Descriere

Historically, cyber security was always a “poor relation” in the eyes of the majority of Boards and CEOs, considered inferior, less important, or not as well-regarded as other issues or compared to them and treated as an annoying cost centre requiring more and more money that could potentially have been spent “better” elsewhere.