1. Protect the Safety of People and Facilities
2. Protect Integrity of Key Financial Data
3. Protect Customer Privacy
4. Protect Restricted Data
5. Facilitate External Communications
Any thoughts?
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
1 comment:
This is pretty close. However, there are no "customers" to keep private. Instead, I would like it to say that it compartmentalizes the pieces so that failure of one doesn't cause a cascade of failures through the system.
Post a Comment