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CyberCIEGE : ウィキペディア英語版
CyberCIEGE

CyberCIEGE is a serious game designed to teach network security concepts. Its development was sponsored by the U.S. Navy, and it is used as a training tool by agencies of the U.S. government, universities and community colleges. The game is freely available to U.S. Government employees. CyberCIEGE is available for licensing from Rivermind for all non Federal government employees.
CyberCIEGE covers a broad range of cybersecurity topics. Players purchase and configure computers and network devices to keep demanding users happy (e.g., by providing Internet access) all while protecting assets from a variety of attacks. The game includes a number of different scenarios, some of which focus on basic training and awareness, others on more advanced network security concepts.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Active Learning with the CyberCIEGE Video Game )〕 A "Scenario Development Kit" is available for creating and customizing scenarios.
Network security components include configurable firewalls, VPN gateways, VPN clients, link encryptors and authentication servers. Workstations and servers include access control lists (ACLs) may be configured with operating systems that enforce label-based mandatory access control policies. Players can deploy Public Key Infrastructure (PKI)-based cryptography to protect email, web traffic and VPNs. The game also includes identity management devices such as biometric scanners and card readers to control access to workstations and physical areas.
The CyberCIEGE game engine consumes a “scenario development language” that describes each scenario in terms of users (and their goals), assets (and their values), the initial state of the scenario in terms of pre-existing components, and the conditions and triggers that provide flow to the scenario. The game engine is defined with enough fidelity to host scenarios ranging from e-mail attachment awareness to cyber warfare.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=CyberCIEGE: Gaming for Information Assurance )
==Game play==

CyberCIEGE scenarios place the player into situations in which the player must make information assurance decisions. The interactive simulation illustrates potential consequences of player choices in terms of attacks on information assets and disruptions to authorized user access to assets. The game employs hyperbole as a means of engaging students in the scenario, and thus the simulation is not intended to always identify the actual consequences of specific choices. The game confronts the student with problems, conflicts and questions that should be considered when developing and implementing a security policy.
The game is designed as a "construction and management simulation" set in a three-dimensional virtual world. Players build networks and observe virtual users and their thoughts. Each scenario is divided into multiple phases and each phase includes one or more objectives the player must achieve prior to moving on to the next phase. Players view the status of the virtual user’s success in achieving goals (i.e., accessing enterprise assets via computers and networks). Unproductive users express unhappy thoughts, utter comic book style speech bubbles and bang on their keyboards. Players see the consequences of attacks as lost money, pop-up messages, video clips and burning computers.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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