Infraestructuras
estratégicas cuyo funcionamiento es indispensable y no permite soluciones
alternativas, por lo que su perturbación o destrucción tendría un grave impacto
sobre los servicios esenciales. [Ley 8/2011]
Instalaciones,
redes, sistemas y equipos físicos y de tecnología de la información sobre las
que descansa el funcionamiento de los servicios esenciales. [Ley 8/2011]
Servicio
necesario para el mantenimiento de las funciones sociales básicas, la salud, la
seguridad, el bienestar social y económico de los ciudadanos, o el eficaz
funcionamiento de las Instituciones del Estado y las Administraciones Públicas.
[Ley 8/2011]
Las
infraestructuras críticas son aquellas instalaciones, redes, servicios y
equipos físicos y de tecnología de la información cuya interrupción o
destrucción pueden tener una repercusión importante en la salud, la seguridad o
el bienestar económico de los ciudadanos o en el eficaz funcionamiento de los
gobiernos de los Estados miembros.
http://europa.eu/scadplus/leg/es/lvb/l33259.htm
Systems and assets, whether
physical or virtual, so vital to the United States that the incapacity or
destruction of such systems and assets would have a debilitating impact on
cybersecurity, national economic security, national public health or safety, or
any combination of those matters.
Framework for Improving
Critical Infrastructure Cybersecurity, National Institute of Standards and
Technology, February 12, 2014
Any infrastructure whose
disruption could have severe impact on a nation or society. In the United
States. Critical Infrastructures are defined by the Homeland Security
Presidential Directive Seven as: Agriculture and Food; Banking and Finance:
Chemical: Commercial Facilities: Critical Manufacturing: Dams: Defense Industrial
Base: Drinking Water and Water Treatment Systems: Emergency Services: Energy:
Government Facilities: Information Technology; National Monuments and Icons;
Nuclear Reactors. Materials. and Waste; Postal and Shipping: Public Health and Healthcare:
Telecommunications: and Transportation Systems. [knapp:2014]
Physical or virtual systems
and assets under the jurisdiction of a State that are so vital that their
incapacitation or destruction may debilitate a State’s security, economy,
public health or safety, or the environment
The Tallinn Manual, 2013
A term used by governments
to describe assets that are essential for the functioning of a society and
economy (e.g. electricity generation, gas production, telecommunications, water
supply etc.). [CSS
NZ:2011]
Critical infrastructures are
organizations or institutions with major importance for the public good, whose
failure or damage would lead to sustainable supply bottlenecks, considerable
disturbance of public security or other dramatic consequences. [CSS DE:2011]
Systems whose incapacity or
destruction would have a debilitating effect on the economic security of an
enterprise, community or nation.
ISACA, Cybersecurity
Glossary, 2014
System and assets, whether
physical or virtual, so vital to the U.S. that the incapacity or destruction of
such systems and assets would have a debilitating impact on security, national
economic security, national public health or safety, or any combination of
those matters. [CNSSI_4009:2010]
Critical
infrastructures can be defined as systems and assets, whether physical or
virtual, so vital to a country that their improper functioning, incapacity or
destruction would have a debilitating impact on national security and defence,
economic security, public health or safety, or any combination of those
matters. Countries define critical infrastructures differently. However, many
countries consider critical infrastructures to include the energy, food, water,
fuel, transport, communications, finance, industry, defence and governmental
and public services sectors.
Cybercrime Convention
Committee (T-CY)