Talk:Community of interest (computer security)

Breadth of term

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This term is much more broad than that identified here ("a means by which network assets and or network users are segregated by some technological means for some established purpose"). Can someone expand this to capture the broader range or perhaps create a disambiguation page? In my prifession, a COI is used to mean people with a similar professional interest (e.g. environmental communicators). Thanks, Hu Gadarn 04:39, 10 June 2006 (UTC)Reply

Thanks for your comments. Actually the article describes "How" users are technically segeregated into logical groups. The segregation can happen along many different lines including putting users with similar professional interests into groupings; including what mentioned above. FrankWilliams 12:20, 12 June 2006 (UTC)Reply

As such it appears that the use of routers, firewalls and VPNs as devices that provide physical separation is not correct. They provide logical separation. As a user I can be physically connected to a network but have no logical connectivity to other users because of these devices.169.252.4.21 (talk) 15:17, 7 November 2008 (UTC)Reply

I agree, the DoD sense of Community is the *people* involved doing data sharing, and the article "means by which network assets and or network users are segregated" is both a lefthanded way to say that and is focusing implementation to networking so later content is only looking at router approach vice the higher governance and alternate implementations such as a filesystem approach or a software content manager like SharePoint or something else. See also "DoD Net-Centric Data Strategy (DS) and Community of Interest (COI) Training", "COI Basics" http://dodcio.defense.gov/Portals/0/Documents/DT-04-DS-COI-COI-Basics.ppt or the glossary http://dodcio.defense.gov/Portals/0/Documents/DT-12-COI-Glossary.pdf

Department of Defense usage

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"COI" in the department of defense refers to a group of people who come together to share data. It has nothing to do with computer networking routers, etc. References to DoDD 8320.2 and 8320.2G should be removed. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 96.228.36.203 (talk) 20:22, 15 August 2008 (UTC)Reply

Please merge the two articles on Communities of interest

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The two articles describe different definitions of the term 'Community of Interest': One describes the rather technichal term used in the field of Computer Security (capitalized: Community_Of_Interest), the other describes what is understood as a type of Virtual Community (only the first word is capitalized: Community_of_interest)

Why I do beleive that this should be one article instead of two (that would still need _way_ more clarification and cross-linking): Because the terms are so closely related! —Preceding unsigned comment added by 134.102.117.64 (talk) 18:01, 22 January 2008 (UTC)Reply

Some of the Sources to support this article: What do you think?

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http://dictionary.sensagent.com/community%20of%20interest%20computer%20security/en-en/ (this is to define the COI)

https://arc.utdallas.edu/communities-of-interest/cybersecurity (multiple research summaries that include the author and their credentials)

http://www.sans.org/coins/ (factual information and data)

https://www.mitre.org/publications/systems-engineering-guide/enterprise-engineering/enterprise-governance/communities-of-interest-andor-community-of-practice

Land Grant University CoP, "Applying to Become a Professional Development Community of Practice

The MITRE Corporation, "Leveraging the Corporation," MITRE Project Leadership Handbook.

Generation YES Blog—Thoughts About Empowering Students with Technology, accessed June 1, 2017.--Oyulayeva (talk) 00:51, 2 June 2017 (UTC)Reply