Assurance
nounid
1536·updated May 9, 2026candidate
Grounds for confidence that the other four security goals (integrity, availability, confidentiality, and accountability) have been adequately met by a specific implementation. “Adequately met” includes (1) functionality that performs correctly, (2) sufficient protection against unintentional errors (by users or software), and (3) sufficient resistance to intentional penetration or by-pass.
polysemous
Classifications
Entity Type
Capability72%llm-generatedllm:claude-haiku-4-5
Sensitivity
unclassified
Information Class
unclassified
Variants
- plural
- Assurances
- possessive
- Assurance's
- pluralpossessive
- Assurances'
Framework definitions
- §1
- Grounds for confidence that the other four security goals (integrity, availability, confidentiality, and accountability) have been adequately met by a specific implementation. “Adequately met” includes (1) functionality that performs correctly, (2) sufficient protection against unintentional errors (by users or software), and (3) sufficient resistance to intentional penetration or by-pass.
- §2 · sense_2_pending_review
- The grounds for confidence that the set of intended security controls in an information system are effective in their application.
- §3 · sense_3_pending_review
- Measure of confidence that the security features, practices, procedures, and architecture of an information system accurately mediates and enforces the security policy.
- §4 · sense_4_pending_review
- In the context of OMB M-04-04 and this document, assurance is defined as 1) the degree of confidence in the vetting process used to establish the identity of an individual to whom the credential was issued, and 2) the degree of confidence that the individual who uses the credential is the individual to whom the credential was issued.
- §1
- Measure of confidence that the security features, practices, procedures, and architecture of an information system accurately mediates and enforces the security policy.
- §1
- The grounds for confidence that the set of intended security controls in an information system are effective in their application.
- §1
- The grounds for confidence that the set of intended security controls in an information system are effective in their application.
- §1
- In the context of OMB M-04-04 and this document, assurance is defined as 1) the degree of confidence in the vetting process used to establish the identity of an individual to whom the credential was issued, and 2) the degree of confidence that the individual who uses the credential is the individual to whom the credential was issued.
- §1
- Measure of confidence that the security features, practices, procedures, and architecture of an information system accurately mediates and enforces the security policy.
- §1
- Grounds for confidence that the other four security goals (integrity, availability, confidentiality, and accountability) have been adequately met by a specific implementation. “Adequately met” includes (1) functionality that performs correctly, (2) sufficient protection against unintentional errors (by users or software), and (3) sufficient resistance to intentional penetration or by-pass.
Outgoing relationships
No outgoing triples
This term is not the subject of any RDF-style relationship yet.
Incoming relationships
No incoming triples
No other term currently asserts a relationship to this one.