Contributors: (ordered alphabetically) Axel Polleres(Vienna University of Economics and Business),
Beatriz Esteves(IDLab, IMEC, Ghent University),
Daniel Doherty(Trinity College Dublin),
Delaram Golpayegani(ADAPT Centre, Trinity College Dublin),
Fajar Ekaputra(Vienna University of Technology),
Georg P. Krog(Signatu AS),
Harshvardhan J. Pandit(ADAPT Centre, Dublin City University),
Julian Flake(University of Koblenz),
Julio Fernandez(Dublin City University),
Rob Brennan(University College Dublin).
NOTE: The affiliations are informative, do not represent formal endorsements, and may be outdated as this list is generated automatically from existing data.
Abstract
The RISK extension to Data Privacy Vocabulary (DPV) Specification provides concepts for representing information associated with risk management, assessment, controls, and consequences. The namespace for terms in risk is https://www.w3id.org/dpv/risk#. The suggested prefix for the namespace is risk. The risk vocabulary and its documentation is available on GitHub.
DPV Specifications: The [DPV] is the core specification within the DPV family, with the following extensions: Personal Data [PD], Locations [LOC], Risk Management [RISK], Technology [TECH] and [AI], [JUSTIFICATIONS], [SECTOR] specific extensions, and [LEGAL] extensions modelling specific jurisdictions and regulations. A [PRIMER] introduces the concepts and modelling of DPV specifications, and [GUIDES] describe application of DPV for specific applications and use-cases. The Search Index page provides a searchable hierarchy of all concepts. The Data Privacy Vocabularies and Controls Community Group (DPVCG) develops and manages these specifications through GitHub. For meetings, see the DPVCG calendar.
Contributing: The DPVCG welcomes participation to improve the DPV and associated resources, including expansion or refinement of concepts, requesting information and applications, and addressing open issues. See contributing guide for further information.
GitHub Issues are preferred for
discussion of this specification.
1. Introduction
The Data Privacy Vocabulary (DPV) Specification specification provides a minimal set of risk assessment concepts which enable simple representations of risks and impacts, and associating them with other concepts. To further assist tasks and representation of information regarding risk assessments, as well as to support the implementation of risk management, the [RISK] extension provide additional concepts and taxonomies through which risks and impacts can be defined - such as to describe incidents, data breaches, their associate reports and notices, risk matrices, and other risk management processes.
The RISK extension utilises the following sources to guide and define its concepts and taxonomies:
Figure 1Overview of Risk Assessment and Management concepts in DPV and RISK extension
The RISK extension relies on the following concepts defined in the [DPV]:
dpv:Risk represents the concept of 'risk' i.e. a possibility or potential of negative events to occur, and is indicated using the relation dpv:hasRisk.
dpv:Impact represents the impacts of the risks and incidents on entities, and is associated using the relation dpv:hasImpact. To indicate who the impact affects, the relation hasImpactOn is used.
The RISK extension utilises the ISO 31000 series of standards for risk management to define and provide relevant concepts. In this, it considers the use and interpretation of these concepts within organisational as well as legal processes, and provides a framework through which the risk management information can be expressed in a consistent manner. The concept RiskManagement represents the process of risk management, and which can be associated with a context using the relation hasRiskManagement. Specific aspects of risk management are expressed through the following concepts and relations:
Orthogonal to these are organisational processes (which are part of OrganisationalMeasure
taxonomy), and include assigning a RiskOwner (associated using hasRiskOwner) for accountability and management. Further organisational concepts can be expanded here in future iterations, such as to represent communication, consultation, monitoring and reviewing processes.
risk:RiskManagement: Systematic application of management policies, procedures, and practices for communicating, consulting, establishing context, and identifying, analysing, evaluating, treating, monitoring and reviewing risk. ISO 31000 definition: coordinated activities to direct and control an organization with regard to risk
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risk:RiskAcceptance: Entity decision to accept or enable a particular risk
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risk:RiskAssessment: Assessment of risk involving its identification, analysis, and evaluation
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risk:RiskAnalysis: A technique or method used to analyse and identify risk levels, sources, likelihoods, severities, and other necessary information required to conduct risk management procedures
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risk:RiskMatrix: Compares individual risks by selecting a consequence/ likelihood pair and displaying them on a matrix with consequence on one axis and likelihood on the other.
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risk:RiskEvaluation: Process determining acceptability or tolerance of risk by comparing risk analysis outcomes against risk criteria
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risk:RiskIdentification: Identification of risks involving identification of risk sources, potential incidents, their causes, and their potential consequences
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risk:RiskSource: The 'cause' or 'source', which by itself or with another source has the potential to give rise to risk
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risk:ThreatSource: Source of threat event, including both agent and non-agent sources
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risk:Vulnerability: Intrinsic property of a system or asset that is utilised by the Threat Source in a Threat event to cause Risk
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risk:RiskCriteria: Criteria for determining or evaluating significance of risk
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risk:RiskTreatment: Process by which risk is modified and mitigated
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3. Risk Assessment
The process of 'Risk Assessment' involves risk identification, analysis, and evaluation, through which information is identified and recorded regarding applicable risks. While the [DPV] specification already provides sufficient concepts to express relevant information, it does not contain practical concepts to represent commonly used information - such as quantified values used in risk analysis. The RISK extension therefore provides such values for risk assessments. The below example outlines how this is useful to represent information.
3.1 Risk Analysis - Likelihood
To express likelihoods, the RISK extension provides the following groups of concepts. Each concept is associated with a suggested value to represent the extent or degree of the concept between 0..1 using rdf:value e.g. ExtremelyLowRisk has a value of 0.01 and HighLikelihood has a value of 0.75. Each group uses these values to express a range within a group e.g. in 3LikelihoodLevels the LowLikelihood (0.25) covers the range 0 to 0.25, while in 7LikelihoodLevels it covers the range from 0.1 (VeryLowLikelihood) to 0.25. Adopters can thus choose the appropriate ranges, and as the values are suggestions - they can be changed to match the requirements of the use-case.
To express severity in a convenient manner, the RISK extension provides the following groups of concepts, where each concept is also associated with a suggested value similar to likelihood to represent the extent or degree of the concept between 0..1 using rdf:value
To express risk levels in a convenient manner, the RISK extension provides the following groups of concepts where each concept is associated with a suggested value to represent the extent or degree of the concept between 0..1 using rdf:value similar to likelihood and severity concepts.
Risk Matrix is a popularly used technique for qualitative risk analysis, through which a risk's likelihood and severity are used to obtain an overall risk level. To support its use, the RISK taxonomy provides concepts representing risk matrices of the format 3x3, 5x5, and 7x7. The concepts are expressed as combinations of Severity (Sx) and Likelihood (Lx) levels, and the resulting Risk Level (Lx) being used as its label. For example, the concept RM3x3S1L3 represents a node in a 3x3 matrix with Severity and Likelihood level low (n=1) and Likelihood level high (n=3) with a resulting Risk Level of 'Moderate'. Similarly, RM7x7S4L7 represents a node in a 7x7 risk matrix with Severity level moderate (n=4) and Likelihood level extremely high (n=7) with the resulting Risk Level of 'Very High Risk'.
It is possible to change the risk levels for the risk matrix by replacing the supplied labels with a custom one. For example, to indicate that the concept RM3x3S1L3 should be 'Low Risk' instead of 'Moderate'. Ideally, this should be done by extending the relevant concepts to indicate a custom / use-case specific enumeration of risk levels and scores. The below table showcases the risk matrix collections provided in the RISK extension. The concepts in each cell can be clicked on for the full definition table. The colours are indicative and are not part of the vocabulary.
The Risk Matrix concepts in the RISK extension are provided with a suggested value 0..1 and a suggested label that implies there is a risk level. However, in RDF, there is no triple stating the suggested risk level, e.g. as dpv:hasRiskLevel risk:HighRisk. This should be provided in the RISK extension for convenience and so that the risk matrix values can be directly used e.g. in risk assessments and impact reporting documents.
To do this, the relevant source spreadsheet can have an additional column called RiskLevel which contains the following enumeration of 7 values representing Extremely Low to Extremely High so that it covers 7x7 matrix, and whose subset represents the 5x5 and 3x3 matrices: EL,VL,L,M,H,VH,EH. The vocab_schema.py and vocab_func.py files can take these values and generate relevant triples similar to how the RiskConcept events are annotated with categories.
4. Incident
The concept Incident represents an event or 'incident' that has occurred, as compared to 'risk' which is a theoretical occurrence of an event. To represent specifics about an Incident such as what personal data was involved, what technical measures were present before the incident occurred, who were humans or data subjects involved, and other pertinent details - the [DPV] concepts and relations should be reused.
The RISK extension provides a taxonomy of incident types based on security and legal assessment needs. For example, the ConfidentialityIncident concept represents an incident affecting the 'confidentiality' dimension in the commonly utilised 'CIA' assessment model. Similarly, CrossBorderIncident represents an incident that affects multiple jurisdictions i.e. the incident 'crosses borders' - such as because there are multiple storage locations being present across jurisdictions, or because the effected entities are across jurisdictions. The concepts DeliberateIncident and AccidentalIncident model the 'intent' behind an incident, which is essential to categorise the continued threat assessment for the incident.
risk:AccidentalIncident: Incident caused due to accidental actions arising from human or human-controlled situations
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risk:AvailabilityIncident: Incident where the availability of information or system has been affected
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risk:ConfidentialityIncident: Incident where the confidentiality of information or system has been affected
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risk:CrossBorderIncident: Incident involving cross-border or multiple jurisdictions
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risk:DeliberateIncident: Incident caused due to deliberate actions of a human
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risk:EnvironmentalIncident: Incident caused due to environmental factors outside human controls
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risk:IntegrityIncident: Incident where the integrity of information or system has been affected
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4.1 Incident Metadata
To indicate the duration of the incident, the [DPV] concept dpv:Duration and relation dpv:hasRelation can be used, or dct:temporal from [DCT] can be used, or other means such as the [TIME] ontology or XSD types. If this information is unknown, then dpv:NotAvailable should be used. If the incident is ongoing, only the start would be available and represented within the period or duration information. The taxonomy of statuses for IncidentStatus is provided to indicate whether the incident is ongoing or concluded (on its own) or it was terminated due to some action taken), which is indicated in context using the relation dpv:hasStatus.
IncidentIdentifier represents an identifier associated with an incident. This concept assists in specifying identifiers that may be assigned by the directly affected entity, or to share identifiers for tracking the same incident amongst entities, or to share an identifiers as a common reference when reporting an incident to authorities.
An IncidentMitigationMeasure is a 'mitigation measure' taken specifically in relation to an incident - such as to reduce the effects or to inform affected stakeholders. The use of 'mitigation' here is from the legal terminology, and includes a broad range of options available under the typical risk management vocabulary such as eliminating, detecting, modifying, and so on. The relation isMitigatedByMeasure
can be useful to associate the measure with an incident.
IncidentNotice is a notice specifically about an incident, such as for providing information to stakeholders, or to report the incident to authorities. It can be associated in context using hasNotice
. Note that extensions modelling legal requirements such as [EU-GDPR] and [EU-NIS2] will provide specific concepts that extend this notice concept corresponding to obligations around reporting.
Further metadata about incidents can be modelled through the [DCTERMS] vocabulary. The DPVCG also welcomes participation and contributions to expand this incident related vocabulary in the RISK extension.
4.2 Incident Status
IncidentStatus refers to the status of the incident itself, and IncidentInvestigationStatus refers to the status of the investigation associated with an incident. Such investigations are obligations under specific legal requirements, such as for data breaches under GDPR, and security incidents under NIS2. These laws require notifying relevant authorities regarding an incident within specific time frames varying from initial preliminary notifications of an incident occurring, to later notifications with a full report when the incident handling has been completed.
risk:IncidentInvestigationStatus: Status associated with investigation of an incident
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risk:IncidentInvestigationCompleted: Status indicating the investigation has been completed and findings are available
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risk:IncidentInvestigationNotStarted: Status indicating the investigation has not yet been started
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risk:IncidentInvestigationOngoing: Status indicating the investigation is ongoing
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risk:IncidentInvestigationPreliminary: Status indicating the investigation is at a preliminary stage with limited findings
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risk:IncidentConcluded: The incident has stopped or finished or concluded without any active mitigation and with a low likelihood of resuming or recurring
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risk:IncidentHalted: The incident has halted or paused with a high likelihood of resuming or recurring
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risk:IncidentMitigated: The incident has been mitigated against future recurrences i.e. a measure has been applied to prevent the same or similar incident from recurring
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risk:IncidentNearMiss: The state where an incident was almost successful in taking place i.e. "it came very close"
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risk:IncidentOngoing: The incident is ongoing i.e. still active
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risk:IncidentStatusUnknown: The status of a incident is unknown
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risk:IncidentSuspected: The state where a incident is suspected, but has not yet been confirmed. This can be due to lack of information, or because the process of detection and investigation is still ongoing
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risk:IncidentTerminated: The incident has been stopped or terminated through the use of a mitigation or deterrent measure with a low likelihood of resuming or recurring
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4.3 Incident Report
An IncidentReport represents a report regarding an incident with the goal of documenting information about an incident found through investigations - such as when it occurred, its scope, effects, sources, as well as information about the investigations itself. The RISK extension defines specific categories of reports to support legal reporting obligations, such as IncidentDetectionReport for reporting when an incident has been detected, or IncidentPreliminaryReport for a preliminary (early) report when the incident and/or its investigation is still ongoing and the complete details may not be available.
risk:IncidentAssessmentReport: A report describing the assessment of an incident in terms of its effects or impacts
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risk:IncidentConcludingReport: A report describing the conclusion of an investigation regarding a Incident where all relevant facts are known
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risk:IncidentDetectionReport: A report describing the detection of a Incident
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risk:IncidentHandlingReport: A report describing the response to or handling of an incident regarding the mitigation of its effects and the prevention of its recurrence
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risk:IncidentOngoingReport: A report describing on ongoing investigation regarding a Incident where facts and extent of the investigation are being investigated
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risk:IncidentPreliminaryReport: A report describing the preliminary investigation regarding a Incident where the complete facts or extent of the incident may not be known
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risk:IncidentSuspectedReport: A report describing the suspicion of an incident in the past or occuring
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5. Risk Controls
A RiskControl allows for modifying the risk (event) through various means with the aim of managing it. It is associated using the relation hasControl. The RISK extension provides a taxonomy of controls based on their use before the event (ProactiveControl) or in response to an event (ReactiveControl). The taxonomy also features control categorised based on the type of risk concept as - SourceControl for risk sources, ConsequenceControl for consequences, and ImpactControl for impacts.
risk:ConsequenceControl: Risk control for managing consequences
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risk:AvoidConsequence: Control that proactively avoids the consequence such that it has a reduced exposure or applicability in the context
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risk:ChangeConsequence: Control that proactively changes the consequence event such that one event is replaced with the occurence or applicability of another event in the context
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risk:HaltConsequence: Control that halts the (ongoing) consequence event or process such that it no longer takes place or is applicable in the context
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risk:RemoveConsequence: Control that proactively removes the consequence event such that the event does not occur in the context
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risk:ImpactControl: Risk Mitigation Measure that controls Impacts
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risk:AvoidImpact: Control that proactively avoids the impact such that it has a reduced exposure or applicability in the context
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risk:ChangeImpact: Control that proactively changes the impact event such that one event is replaced with the occurence or applicability of another event in the context
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risk:HaltImpact: Control that halts the (ongoing) impact event or process such that it no longer takes place or is applicable in the context
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risk:RemoveImpact: Control that proactively removes the impact event such that the event does not occur in the context
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risk:ProactiveControl: Control that is established or functions before an event occurs
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risk:AvoidanceControl: Control that avoids an event with the goal of removing it completely
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risk:AvoidConsequence: Control that proactively avoids the consequence such that it has a reduced exposure or applicability in the context
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risk:AvoidImpact: Control that proactively avoids the impact such that it has a reduced exposure or applicability in the context
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risk:AvoidSource: Control that proactively avoids the risk source such that it has a reduced exposure or applicability in the context
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risk:EliminationControl: Control that eliminates an event entirely such that the event does not occur
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risk:RemoveConsequence: Control that proactively removes the consequence event such that the event does not occur in the context
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risk:RemoveImpact: Control that proactively removes the impact event such that the event does not occur in the context
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risk:RemoveSource: Control that proactively removes the risk source such that it is no longer present or applicable in the context
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risk:SubstitutionControl: Control that substitutes an event with another such that the initial event no longer takes place while the substituted event takes place in place of it
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risk:ChangeConsequence: Control that proactively changes the consequence event such that one event is replaced with the occurence or applicability of another event in the context
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risk:ChangeImpact: Control that proactively changes the impact event such that one event is replaced with the occurence or applicability of another event in the context
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risk:MitigationControl: Control that aims to reduce the likelihood or effect of an event with the goal of managing an event accepted to occur
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risk:ModificationControl: Control that modifies the context to change the event's characteristics such that the event still occurs but with the modified characteristics with the goal of managing an event that is accepted to occur
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risk:MonitorControl: Control that monitors for the occurence of an event
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risk:MonitorVulnerabilities: Control that monitors a Risk Vulnerability
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risk:OversightControl: Control that provides oversight for an event in terms of having information about it and being able to supervise or manage it
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risk:TransparencyControl: Control that provides information about an event
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risk:ReactiveControl: Control that is established or functions after an event occurs
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risk:InvestigationControl: Control that identifies information through an investigative process about an event and its effects after it has occured
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risk:OverrideControl: Control that aims to override the event with the goal of avoiding its further effects
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risk:ReductionControl: Control that reduces the effects of an event
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risk:ContainmentControl: Control that aims to contain the event in terms of limiting its occurence or effects
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risk:InterruptionControl: Control that interrupts an event without removing the possibility for it to be resumed and where the aim is to stop the event
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risk:HaltConsequence: Control that halts the (ongoing) consequence event or process such that it no longer takes place or is applicable in the context
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risk:HaltImpact: Control that halts the (ongoing) impact event or process such that it no longer takes place or is applicable in the context
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risk:HaltSource: Control that halts the (ongoing) risk source event or process such that it no longer takes place or is applicable in the context
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risk:InterventionControl: Control that intervenes in the operations of the event to change some context with the aim of changing the event or the effects
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risk:ReduceLikelihood: Control that reduces the likelihood of an event to occur
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risk:ReduceSeverity: Control that reduces the severity of an event's effects
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risk:ResolutionControl: Control that aims to resolve an event's effects with the goal of fixing or recovering from it
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risk:RecoveryControl: Control that aims to restore the context following an event
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risk:RemeditationControl: Control that aims to fix or remedy the causes of an event to prevent further occurences
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risk:ReversalControl: Control that aims to reverse or undo the effects of an event
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risk:AvoidSource: Control that proactively avoids the risk source such that it has a reduced exposure or applicability in the context
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risk:HaltSource: Control that halts the (ongoing) risk source event or process such that it no longer takes place or is applicable in the context
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risk:RemoveSource: Control that proactively removes the risk source such that it is no longer present or applicable in the context
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risk:TransferControl: Control that aims to transfer the event (or risk) to another context or entity
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risk:ShareControl: Control that aims to share or distribute the event (or risk) with another context or entity
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risk:ShareRisk: Risk Mitigation Measure that shares Risk e.g. amongst stakeholders
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6. Risk/Impact Taxonomies
The RISK extension provides a single unified taxonomy of concepts which can be used as risk sources, risks, consequences, or impacts - as required in specific contexts and use-cases. The underlying model which permits this flexibility and allows creation of thesauri and catalogues for providing curated collections of concepts in use-cases is described in the Conceptual Model section.
The taxonomy consists of concepts which are annotated as being capable of or having the potential to be with specific roles and categorisations based on the conceptual model. These are described in sections as:
An overview table shows each concept along with its categorisation in a convenient manner. There is also a dedicated section provide details on modelling rights impacts based on the provided taxonomy.
6.1 Conceptual Model
The RISK extension provides a taxonomy of concepts such as HumanErrors, Damage, and Harm that represent 'events' that can used in specific roles within the use-case. For example, HumanErrors can be a 'source of risk' where a software developer introduces a bug/error in the code; a 'risk' where the software user accidentally deletes critical data while using the software - where the source is poorly designed UI/UX; and a 'consequence' where the developer accidentally uses the incorrect backup when recovering from a data breach - where the risk is the data breach and the source is insecure system settings. This example highlights that 'roles' such as risk source, risk, consequence, and impacts are contextual assertions, and that the same 'event' or 'concept' can take on different roles in different settings.
The taxonomy provided in RISK is intended to support such broad use of concepts for taking on different roles as needed within the context. This is particularly valuable as the areas of cybersecurity and AI technologies are rapidly evolving landscapes where new risks and consequences frequently emerge, and depending on the perspective the same concept can act as a consequence (e.g. early in development stages) or be the source of risks (e.g. later in deployment stages). Further, the RISK extension also aims to support the creation of 'thesauri' or 'catalogues' of concepts - such as a 'risk catalogue', which provides a curated list of concepts that stakeholders can use in their respective contexts.
To enable such varied uses of the taxonomy, the RISK extension uses 'meta concepts' called PotentialRisk, PotentialRiskSource, PotentialConsequence, and PotentialImpact that represent the potential roles that a concept can take within a context. A concept expressed as PotentialRisk and PotentialConsequence means that the concept can potentially act as a risk or a consequence based on common uses of that concept, but it does not mean that the concept is always a risk or a consequence. The person or system that is identifying risks and consequences can then refer to this categorisation as a hint for what concepts could be applicable in their use-case rather than having to go through the entire taxonomy.
The concepts such as PotentialRisk are also helpful to curate thesauri and catalogues. For example, when creating a risk catalogue associated with testing phase of software development, we can express the source of risks (as PotentialRiskSource) and then provide these to the developers and testers to assess for a particular software iteration, and record which risks are applicable (as Risk
). Similarly, if the organisation wants to create two catalogues of common software risks and user risks, it can extend PotentialRisk as PotentialSoftwareRisks for potential risks that may occur in software and PotentialUserRisks which may occur due to users, then annotate the RISK taxonomy using these, and provide it as inputs to consider in the risk assessment process.
Note: Impact of not having the 'potential role concepts'
To further support the utility of the taxonomy, where possible, concepts are also categorised based on the commonly utilised 'CIA triad model' in information security, where 'CIA' stands for 'Confidentiality', 'Integrity', and 'Availability'. These are represented by the specific concept being declared as an instance of ConfidentialityConcept, IntegrityConcept, and AvailabilityConcept respectively.
6.2 Potential Risk Sources
A PotentialRiskSource represents a concept which can be a risk source or act like a risk source in specific concepts. The concept can also be used to create domain or sector or use-case specific groupings of concepts which can act as risk sources in context. Concepts which can act as a potential risk source are defined as an instance of PotentialRiskSource.
risk:LegalRiskConcept: Risk concepts, including any potential risk sources, consequences, or impacts, that are legal in nature or relate to a legal system or process
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risk:LegalComplianceRisk: Risks and consequences regarding legal compliance and its violation
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risk:PolicyRisk: Risks and consequences regarding policy and its associated processes
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risk:OrganisationalRiskConcept: Risk concepts, including any potential risk sources, consequences, or impacts, that are organisational in nature or relate to an organisational process
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risk:OrganisationalManagementRisk: Concept representing issues and risks associated with the management of operations and resources by the organisation
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risk:HumanOversightIneffective: Concept representing cases where human oversight is ineffective for the intended effect, such as for when human can observe a problem but cannot do anything about it
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risk:HumanOversightInsufficient: Concept representing cases where human oversight is insufficient for the intended effect, such as not being capable of identifying a problem
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risk:InstructionsIncorrect: Concept representing cases where instructions are incorrect for achieving the intended effect
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risk:InstructionsInsufficient: Concept representing cases where instructions are not sufficient for the intended effect
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risk:LackOfSystemTransparency: Concept representing lack of transpareny to humans related to the operation of a system
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risk:StaffIncompetence: Concept representing incompetence of staff
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risk:TechnologyOverreliance: Concept representing the case where an entity, including individuals, have an overreliance on the use of technology
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risk:UserRisks: Concepts associated with risks that arise due to User or Human use
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risk:ErroneousUse: Concept representing erroneous use (of something)
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risk:HumanErrors: Concept representing activities that are errors caused by humans without intention and which was not caused by following rules or policies or instructions that were not from the person
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risk:AccidentalMisuse: Concept representing accidental misuse (of something)
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risk:IntentionalMisuse: Concept represent an intentional misuse (of something)
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risk:SocietalRiskConcept: Risk concepts, including any potential risk sources, consequences, or impacts, that are societal in nature or relate to a social setting or process
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risk:TechnicalRiskConcept: Risk concepts, including any potential risk sources, consequences, or impacts, that are technical in nature or relate to a technical or technological process
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risk:Bias: Bias is defined as the systematic difference in treatment of certain objects, people, or groups in comparison to others
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risk:CognitiveBias: Bias that occurs when humans are processing and interpreting information
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risk:ConfirmationBias: Bias that occurs when hypotheses, regardless of their veracity, are more likely to be confirmed by the intentional or unintentional interpretation of information
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risk:GroupAttributionBias: Bias that occurs when a human assumes that what is true for an individual or object is also true for everyone, or all objects, in that group
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risk:ImplicitBias: Bias that occurs when a human makes an association or assumption based on their mental models and memories
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risk:InGroupBias: Bias that occurs when showing partiality to one's own group or own characteristics
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risk:OutGroupHomogeneityBias: Bias that occurs when seeing out-group members as more alike than in-group members when comparing attitudes, values, personality traits, and other characteristics
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risk:RequirementsBias: Bias that occurs in or during requirements creation
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risk:RuleBasedSystemDesign: Bias that occurs due to developer experience and expert advice having a significant influence on rule-based system design
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risk:SocietalBias: Bias that occurs when similiar cognitive bias (conscious or unconscious) is being held by many individuals in society
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risk:DataBias: Bias that occurs when data properties that if unaddressed lead to systems that perform better or worse for different groups
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risk:DataAggregationBias: Bias that occurs when aggregating data covering different groups of objects has different statistical distributions that introduce bias into the data
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risk:DataProcessingBias: Bias that occurs due to pre-processing (or post-processing) of data, even though the original data would not have led to any bias
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risk:InformativenessBias: Bias that occurs when the mapping between inputs present in the data and outputs are more difficult to identify for some group
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risk:SimpsonsParadoxBias: Bias that occurs when a trend that is indicated in individual groups of data reverses when the groups of data are combined
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risk:StatisticalBias: Bias that occurs as the type of consistent numerical offset in an estimate relative to the true underlying value, inherent to most estimates
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risk:ConfoundingVariablesBias: Bias that occurs as a confounding variable that influences both the dependent variable and independent variable causing a spurious association
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risk:NonNormalityBias: Bias that occurs when the dataset is subject to a different (i.e. non-normal) distribution (e.g., Chi-Square, Beta, Lorentz, Cauchy, Weibull or Pareto) where the results can be biased and misleading
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risk:SelectionBias: Bias that occurs when a dataset's samples are chosen in a way that is not reflective of their real-world distribution
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risk:CoverageBias: Bias that occurs when a population represented in a dataset does not match the actual or real population that are being used
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risk:NonResponseBias: Bias that occurs when people from certain groups opt-out of surveys at different rates than users from other groups. This is also called as Participation bias
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risk:SamplingBias: Bias that occurs when data records are not collected randomly from the intended population
go to full definition
risk:DataBias: Bias that occurs when data properties that if unaddressed lead to systems that perform better or worse for different groups
go to full definition
risk:DataAggregationBias: Bias that occurs when aggregating data covering different groups of objects has different statistical distributions that introduce bias into the data
go to full definition
risk:DataProcessingBias: Bias that occurs due to pre-processing (or post-processing) of data, even though the original data would not have led to any bias
go to full definition
risk:InformativenessBias: Bias that occurs when the mapping between inputs present in the data and outputs are more difficult to identify for some group
go to full definition
risk:SimpsonsParadoxBias: Bias that occurs when a trend that is indicated in individual groups of data reverses when the groups of data are combined
go to full definition
risk:StatisticalBias: Bias that occurs as the type of consistent numerical offset in an estimate relative to the true underlying value, inherent to most estimates
go to full definition
risk:ConfoundingVariablesBias: Bias that occurs as a confounding variable that influences both the dependent variable and independent variable causing a spurious association
go to full definition
risk:NonNormalityBias: Bias that occurs when the dataset is subject to a different (i.e. non-normal) distribution (e.g., Chi-Square, Beta, Lorentz, Cauchy, Weibull or Pareto) where the results can be biased and misleading
go to full definition
risk:SelectionBias: Bias that occurs when a dataset's samples are chosen in a way that is not reflective of their real-world distribution
go to full definition
risk:CoverageBias: Bias that occurs when a population represented in a dataset does not match the actual or real population that are being used
go to full definition
risk:NonResponseBias: Bias that occurs when people from certain groups opt-out of surveys at different rates than users from other groups. This is also called as Participation bias
go to full definition
risk:SamplingBias: Bias that occurs when data records are not collected randomly from the intended population
go to full definition
risk:DataInaccurate: Concept representing data being inaccurate
go to full definition
risk:DataIncomplete: Concept representing data being incomplete
go to full definition
risk:DataInconsistent: Concept representing data being inconsistent
go to full definition
risk:DataMisclassified: Concept representing data being misclassified
go to full definition
risk:DataMisinterpretation: Concept representing data being misinterpretation
go to full definition
risk:DataUnavailable: Concept representing data being unavailable
go to full definition
risk:DataUnrepresentative: Concept representing data being unrepresentative
go to full definition
risk:DataUnstructured: Concept representing data being unstructured
go to full definition
risk:DataUnverified: Concept representing data being unverified
go to full definition
risk:ExternalSecurityThreat: Concepts associated with security threats that are likely to originate externally
go to full definition
risk:CompromiseAccount: Concept representing a compromised account that is then used by the compromiser
go to full definition
risk:CompromiseAccountCredentials: Concept representing Account Credentials to be compromised
go to full definition
risk:MaliciousActivity: Intentional actions designed to harm, exploit, manipulate, or disrupt individuals, systems, or organizations for personal gain or detriment to others
go to full definition
risk:SecurityAttack: Concept representing an attack on security with the aim of undermining it
go to full definition
risk:BruteForceAuthorisations: Concept representing Brute Force Authorisations i.e. bypassing authorisations through brute forcing techniques
go to full definition
risk:SystemMalfunction: Concept representing System Malfunction
go to full definition
risk:TaskExecutionRisk: Concept representing risks and issues associated with execution of tasks, operations, activities, and other similar processes
go to full definition
risk:TaskExecutionIncorrect: Concept representing incorrect execution of task(s)
go to full definition
risk:TaskTimingIncorrect: Concept representing incorrect timing for task(s) i.e. the task execution does not occur at the correct time
go to full definition
6.3 Potential Risks
A PotentialRisk represents a concept which can be a risk or act like a risk in specific concepts. The concept can also be used to create domain or sector or use-case specific groupings of concepts which can act as risks in context. Concepts which can act as a potential risks are defined as an instance of PotentialRisk.
risk:LegalRiskConcept: Risk concepts, including any potential risk sources, consequences, or impacts, that are legal in nature or relate to a legal system or process
go to full definition
risk:LegalComplianceRisk: Risks and consequences regarding legal compliance and its violation
go to full definition
risk:CopyrightViolation: Concept representing Copyright Violation
go to full definition
risk:IllegalDataProcessing: Concept representing Illegal Processing of Data
go to full definition
risk:PublicOrderBreach: Concept representing Public Order Breach
go to full definition
risk:ViolatingContractualObligation: Concept representing Violation of Contractual Obligations
go to full definition
risk:ViolatingLegalObligation: Concept representing Violation of Legal Obligations
go to full definition
risk:ViolatingStatutoryObligations: Concept representing Violation of Statutory Obligations
go to full definition
risk:LegallyRelevantConsequence: A consequence that is legally relevant i.e. actionable under law
go to full definition
risk:NonMaterialDamage: Concept representing Non-Material Damage
go to full definition
risk:PolicyRisk: Risks and consequences regarding policy and its associated processes
go to full definition
risk:ViolatingCodeOfConduct: Concept representing Violation of Code of Conduct
go to full definition
risk:ViolatingEthicsCode: Concept representing Violation of Ethics Code
go to full definition
risk:ViolatingObligation: Something that acts as a or violates an obligation - e.g. in a law, code of conduct, policy, contract
go to full definition
risk:CopyrightViolation: Concept representing Copyright Violation
go to full definition
risk:ViolatingContractualObligation: Concept representing Violation of Contractual Obligations
go to full definition
risk:ViolatingLegalObligation: Concept representing Violation of Legal Obligations
go to full definition
risk:ViolatingStatutoryObligations: Concept representing Violation of Statutory Obligations
go to full definition
risk:ViolatingPolicy: Concept representing violation of policy which can be either internal or external policy
go to full definition
risk:ViolatingProhibition: Something that acts as a or violates a prohibition - e.g. in a law, code of conduct, policy, contract
go to full definition
risk:OrganisationalRiskConcept: Risk concepts, including any potential risk sources, consequences, or impacts, that are organisational in nature or relate to an organisational process
go to full definition
risk:FinancialImpact: Things that cause or have the potential to impact financial resources
go to full definition
risk:FinancialLoss: Concept representing Financial Loss which may be actual loss of existing financial assets or hypothetical loss of financial opportunity
go to full definition
risk:JudicialCosts: Something that involves or causes judicial costs to be paid
go to full definition
risk:JudicialPenalty: Something that involves or causes judicial penalties to be paid
go to full definition
risk:Renumeration: Something that acts as or provides renumeration which is in monetary or financial form
go to full definition
risk:Compensation: Something that acts as or provides compensation - which can be monetary and financial or in other forms
go to full definition
risk:Benefit: Concept representing benefits - both material and immaterial
go to full definition
risk:Payment: Something that acts as or provides payment e.g. to access a service or purchase resources
go to full definition
risk:Reward: Something that acts as or provides rewards i.e. a benefit given for some service or activity that is not a payment or fee
go to full definition
risk:OrganisationalManagementRisk: Concept representing issues and risks associated with the management of operations and resources by the organisation
go to full definition
risk:HumanOversightIneffective: Concept representing cases where human oversight is ineffective for the intended effect, such as for when human can observe a problem but cannot do anything about it
go to full definition
risk:HumanOversightInsufficient: Concept representing cases where human oversight is insufficient for the intended effect, such as not being capable of identifying a problem
go to full definition
risk:InstructionsIncorrect: Concept representing cases where instructions are incorrect for achieving the intended effect
go to full definition
risk:InstructionsInsufficient: Concept representing cases where instructions are not sufficient for the intended effect
go to full definition
risk:LackOfSystemTransparency: Concept representing lack of transpareny to humans related to the operation of a system
go to full definition
risk:StaffIncompetence: Concept representing incompetence of staff
go to full definition
risk:TechnologyOverreliance: Concept representing the case where an entity, including individuals, have an overreliance on the use of technology
go to full definition
risk:ReputationalRisk: Risks and issues that affect the reputation of the organisation
go to full definition
risk:LoseCredibility: Concept representing Loss of Credibility
go to full definition
risk:LoseCustomerConfidence: Concept representing Loss of Customer Confidence
go to full definition
risk:ServiceProvisionDelayed: Concept representing service provision delayed
go to full definition
risk:ServiceQualityReduced: Concept representing service quality reduced
go to full definition
risk:ServiceSecurityReduced: Concept representing service security reduced
go to full definition
risk:ServiceTermination: Concept representing service termination
go to full definition
risk:UserRisks: Concepts associated with risks that arise due to User or Human use
go to full definition
risk:ErroneousUse: Concept representing erroneous use (of something)
go to full definition
risk:HumanErrors: Concept representing activities that are errors caused by humans without intention and which was not caused by following rules or policies or instructions that were not from the person
go to full definition
risk:AccidentalMisuse: Concept representing accidental misuse (of something)
go to full definition
risk:IntentionalMisuse: Concept represent an intentional misuse (of something)
go to full definition
risk:SocietalRiskConcept: Risk concepts, including any potential risk sources, consequences, or impacts, that are societal in nature or relate to a social setting or process
go to full definition
risk:Discrimination: Discrimination is the treatment of a person or particular group of people differently, in a way that is worse than the way people are usually treate
go to full definition
risk:AgeDiscrimination: Discrimination based on a person's age, often impacting older or younger individuals
go to full definition
risk:BelievesDiscrimination: Discrimination based on a person's beliefs or practices
go to full definition
risk:CasteDiscrimination: Discrimination based on a person's caste, a form of social stratification found in some cultures
go to full definition
risk:DirectDiscrimination: Occurs when a person is treated less favorably than another in a comparable situation based on a protected characteristic (e.g., race, sex, disability)
go to full definition
risk:DisabilityDiscrimination: Discrimination against individuals based on physical or mental disabilities
go to full definition
risk:ExcellenceDiscrimination: Favoritism towards individuals deemed more competent or superior, often at the expense of others
go to full definition
risk:GeographicDiscrimination: Discrimination based on a person's geographical origin or residence
go to full definition
risk:IndirectDiscrimination: Occurs when an apparently neutral provision, criterion, or practice puts individuals of a certain group at a disadvantage compared to others, unless it can be objectively justified
go to full definition
risk:LanguageDiscrimination: Discrimination based on a person's language, often linked to national origin or ethnicity
go to full definition
risk:NationalityDiscrimination: Discrimination based on a person's nationality or citizenship
go to full definition
risk:Racism: Prejudice or discrimination against people based on their race
go to full definition
risk:EthnicDiscrimination: Discrimination against individuals based on their ethnicity or cultural heritage
go to full definition
risk:RacialDiscrimination: Discrimination against individuals because of their racial background or skin color
go to full definition
risk:ReligiousDiscrimination: Discrimination based on a person's relligion or religious beliefs or practices
go to full definition
risk:ReverseDiscrimination: Discrimination against members of a majority or historically dominant group, often in the context of efforts to promote equality
go to full definition
risk:Sexism: Discrimination based on a person's sex or gender, typically involving unequal treatment or stereotyping
go to full definition
risk:GenderDiscrimination: Discrimination based on a person's gender identity or gender expression
go to full definition
risk:SexDiscrimination: Discrimination based on a person's biological sex
go to full definition
risk:Transphobia: Hostility or prejudice against transgender people or those perceived as not conforming to traditional gender norms
go to full definition
risk:SexualOrientationDiscrimination: Discrimination based on a person's sexual orientation, typically against those who are not heterosexual
go to full definition
risk:Homophobia: Hostility or prejudice against individuals who are or are perceived to be homosexual
go to full definition
risk:WorkplaceDiscrimination: Discrimination occuring at workplace or in the context of work environments
go to full definition
risk:EnvironmentalRisk: Risks and issues that have their origin in environment or can affect the environment at large
go to full definition
risk:DisproportionateEnergyConsumption: The occurence or potential occurence of disproportionate energy consumption when considering the value obtained from undertaking the activity and the amount of energy being utilised
go to full definition
risk:Earthquake: The occurence or potential occurence of earthquakes
go to full definition
risk:RightsDenied: The refusal or withholding or denial of the existence or applicability of rights
go to full definition
risk:RightsEroded: The gradual weakening or reduction of the scope and protection of rights
go to full definition
risk:RightsExercisePrevented: Actions or measures that prevent an individual or group from exercising their legal rights.
go to full definition
risk:RightsLimited: A limitation or restrictions on the scope or exercise of rights
go to full definition
risk:RightsObstructed: Interference with or blocking of the exercise of rights
go to full definition
risk:RightsUnfulfilled: Failure to meet or complete the fulfilment of rights
go to full definition
risk:RightsViolated: The infringement or breach of rights in a manner that constitutes a 'violation' of those rights
go to full definition
risk:TechnicalRiskConcept: Risk concepts, including any potential risk sources, consequences, or impacts, that are technical in nature or relate to a technical or technological process
go to full definition
risk:Bias: Bias is defined as the systematic difference in treatment of certain objects, people, or groups in comparison to others
go to full definition
risk:CognitiveBias: Bias that occurs when humans are processing and interpreting information
go to full definition
risk:ConfirmationBias: Bias that occurs when hypotheses, regardless of their veracity, are more likely to be confirmed by the intentional or unintentional interpretation of information
go to full definition
risk:GroupAttributionBias: Bias that occurs when a human assumes that what is true for an individual or object is also true for everyone, or all objects, in that group
go to full definition
risk:ImplicitBias: Bias that occurs when a human makes an association or assumption based on their mental models and memories
go to full definition
risk:InGroupBias: Bias that occurs when showing partiality to one's own group or own characteristics
go to full definition
risk:OutGroupHomogeneityBias: Bias that occurs when seeing out-group members as more alike than in-group members when comparing attitudes, values, personality traits, and other characteristics
go to full definition
risk:RequirementsBias: Bias that occurs in or during requirements creation
go to full definition
risk:RuleBasedSystemDesign: Bias that occurs due to developer experience and expert advice having a significant influence on rule-based system design
go to full definition
risk:SocietalBias: Bias that occurs when similiar cognitive bias (conscious or unconscious) is being held by many individuals in society
go to full definition
risk:DataBias: Bias that occurs when data properties that if unaddressed lead to systems that perform better or worse for different groups
go to full definition
risk:DataAggregationBias: Bias that occurs when aggregating data covering different groups of objects has different statistical distributions that introduce bias into the data
go to full definition
risk:DataProcessingBias: Bias that occurs due to pre-processing (or post-processing) of data, even though the original data would not have led to any bias
go to full definition
risk:InformativenessBias: Bias that occurs when the mapping between inputs present in the data and outputs are more difficult to identify for some group
go to full definition
risk:SimpsonsParadoxBias: Bias that occurs when a trend that is indicated in individual groups of data reverses when the groups of data are combined
go to full definition
risk:StatisticalBias: Bias that occurs as the type of consistent numerical offset in an estimate relative to the true underlying value, inherent to most estimates
go to full definition
risk:ConfoundingVariablesBias: Bias that occurs as a confounding variable that influences both the dependent variable and independent variable causing a spurious association
go to full definition
risk:NonNormalityBias: Bias that occurs when the dataset is subject to a different (i.e. non-normal) distribution (e.g., Chi-Square, Beta, Lorentz, Cauchy, Weibull or Pareto) where the results can be biased and misleading
go to full definition
risk:SelectionBias: Bias that occurs when a dataset's samples are chosen in a way that is not reflective of their real-world distribution
go to full definition
risk:CoverageBias: Bias that occurs when a population represented in a dataset does not match the actual or real population that are being used
go to full definition
risk:NonResponseBias: Bias that occurs when people from certain groups opt-out of surveys at different rates than users from other groups. This is also called as Participation bias
go to full definition
risk:SamplingBias: Bias that occurs when data records are not collected randomly from the intended population
go to full definition
risk:DataBias: Bias that occurs when data properties that if unaddressed lead to systems that perform better or worse for different groups
go to full definition
risk:DataAggregationBias: Bias that occurs when aggregating data covering different groups of objects has different statistical distributions that introduce bias into the data
go to full definition
risk:DataProcessingBias: Bias that occurs due to pre-processing (or post-processing) of data, even though the original data would not have led to any bias
go to full definition
risk:InformativenessBias: Bias that occurs when the mapping between inputs present in the data and outputs are more difficult to identify for some group
go to full definition
risk:SimpsonsParadoxBias: Bias that occurs when a trend that is indicated in individual groups of data reverses when the groups of data are combined
go to full definition
risk:StatisticalBias: Bias that occurs as the type of consistent numerical offset in an estimate relative to the true underlying value, inherent to most estimates
go to full definition
risk:ConfoundingVariablesBias: Bias that occurs as a confounding variable that influences both the dependent variable and independent variable causing a spurious association
go to full definition
risk:NonNormalityBias: Bias that occurs when the dataset is subject to a different (i.e. non-normal) distribution (e.g., Chi-Square, Beta, Lorentz, Cauchy, Weibull or Pareto) where the results can be biased and misleading
go to full definition
risk:SelectionBias: Bias that occurs when a dataset's samples are chosen in a way that is not reflective of their real-world distribution
go to full definition
risk:CoverageBias: Bias that occurs when a population represented in a dataset does not match the actual or real population that are being used
go to full definition
risk:NonResponseBias: Bias that occurs when people from certain groups opt-out of surveys at different rates than users from other groups. This is also called as Participation bias
go to full definition
risk:SamplingBias: Bias that occurs when data records are not collected randomly from the intended population
go to full definition
risk:DataInaccurate: Concept representing data being inaccurate
go to full definition
risk:DataIncomplete: Concept representing data being incomplete
go to full definition
risk:DataInconsistent: Concept representing data being inconsistent
go to full definition
risk:DataMisclassified: Concept representing data being misclassified
go to full definition
risk:DataMisinterpretation: Concept representing data being misinterpretation
go to full definition
risk:DataUnavailable: Concept representing data being unavailable
go to full definition
risk:DataUnrepresentative: Concept representing data being unrepresentative
go to full definition
risk:DataUnstructured: Concept representing data being unstructured
go to full definition
risk:DataUnverified: Concept representing data being unverified
go to full definition
risk:ExternalSecurityThreat: Concepts associated with security threats that are likely to originate externally
go to full definition
risk:CompromiseAccount: Concept representing a compromised account that is then used by the compromiser
go to full definition
risk:CompromiseAccountCredentials: Concept representing Account Credentials to be compromised
go to full definition
risk:MaliciousActivity: Intentional actions designed to harm, exploit, manipulate, or disrupt individuals, systems, or organizations for personal gain or detriment to others
go to full definition
risk:SecurityAttack: Concept representing an attack on security with the aim of undermining it
go to full definition
risk:BruteForceAuthorisations: Concept representing Brute Force Authorisations i.e. bypassing authorisations through brute forcing techniques
go to full definition
risk:SystemMalfunction: Concept representing System Malfunction
go to full definition
risk:TaskExecutionRisk: Concept representing risks and issues associated with execution of tasks, operations, activities, and other similar processes
go to full definition
risk:TaskExecutionIncorrect: Concept representing incorrect execution of task(s)
go to full definition
risk:TaskTimingIncorrect: Concept representing incorrect timing for task(s) i.e. the task execution does not occur at the correct time
go to full definition
6.4 Potential Consequences
A PotentialConsequence represents a concept which can be a consequence or act like a consequence in specific concepts. The concept can also be used to create domain or sector or use-case specific groupings of concepts which can act as consequences in context. Concepts which can act as a potential consequence are defined as an instance of PotentialConsequence.
risk:LegalRiskConcept: Risk concepts, including any potential risk sources, consequences, or impacts, that are legal in nature or relate to a legal system or process
go to full definition
risk:LegalComplianceRisk: Risks and consequences regarding legal compliance and its violation
go to full definition
risk:CopyrightViolation: Concept representing Copyright Violation
go to full definition
risk:IllegalDataProcessing: Concept representing Illegal Processing of Data
go to full definition
risk:PublicOrderBreach: Concept representing Public Order Breach
go to full definition
risk:ViolatingContractualObligation: Concept representing Violation of Contractual Obligations
go to full definition
risk:ViolatingLegalObligation: Concept representing Violation of Legal Obligations
go to full definition
risk:ViolatingStatutoryObligations: Concept representing Violation of Statutory Obligations
go to full definition
risk:LegallyRelevantConsequence: A consequence that is legally relevant i.e. actionable under law
go to full definition
risk:NonMaterialDamage: Concept representing Non-Material Damage
go to full definition
risk:PolicyRisk: Risks and consequences regarding policy and its associated processes
go to full definition
risk:ViolatingCodeOfConduct: Concept representing Violation of Code of Conduct
go to full definition
risk:ViolatingEthicsCode: Concept representing Violation of Ethics Code
go to full definition
risk:ViolatingObligation: Something that acts as a or violates an obligation - e.g. in a law, code of conduct, policy, contract
go to full definition
risk:CopyrightViolation: Concept representing Copyright Violation
go to full definition
risk:ViolatingContractualObligation: Concept representing Violation of Contractual Obligations
go to full definition
risk:ViolatingLegalObligation: Concept representing Violation of Legal Obligations
go to full definition
risk:ViolatingStatutoryObligations: Concept representing Violation of Statutory Obligations
go to full definition
risk:ViolatingPolicy: Concept representing violation of policy which can be either internal or external policy
go to full definition
risk:ViolatingProhibition: Something that acts as a or violates a prohibition - e.g. in a law, code of conduct, policy, contract
go to full definition
risk:OrganisationalRiskConcept: Risk concepts, including any potential risk sources, consequences, or impacts, that are organisational in nature or relate to an organisational process
go to full definition
risk:FinancialImpact: Things that cause or have the potential to impact financial resources
go to full definition
risk:FinancialLoss: Concept representing Financial Loss which may be actual loss of existing financial assets or hypothetical loss of financial opportunity
go to full definition
risk:JudicialCosts: Something that involves or causes judicial costs to be paid
go to full definition
risk:JudicialPenalty: Something that involves or causes judicial penalties to be paid
go to full definition
risk:Renumeration: Something that acts as or provides renumeration which is in monetary or financial form
go to full definition
risk:Compensation: Something that acts as or provides compensation - which can be monetary and financial or in other forms
go to full definition
risk:Benefit: Concept representing benefits - both material and immaterial
go to full definition
risk:Payment: Something that acts as or provides payment e.g. to access a service or purchase resources
go to full definition
risk:Reward: Something that acts as or provides rewards i.e. a benefit given for some service or activity that is not a payment or fee
go to full definition
risk:OrganisationalManagementRisk: Concept representing issues and risks associated with the management of operations and resources by the organisation
go to full definition
risk:HumanOversightIneffective: Concept representing cases where human oversight is ineffective for the intended effect, such as for when human can observe a problem but cannot do anything about it
go to full definition
risk:HumanOversightInsufficient: Concept representing cases where human oversight is insufficient for the intended effect, such as not being capable of identifying a problem
go to full definition
risk:InstructionsIncorrect: Concept representing cases where instructions are incorrect for achieving the intended effect
go to full definition
risk:InstructionsInsufficient: Concept representing cases where instructions are not sufficient for the intended effect
go to full definition
risk:LackOfSystemTransparency: Concept representing lack of transpareny to humans related to the operation of a system
go to full definition
risk:StaffIncompetence: Concept representing incompetence of staff
go to full definition
risk:TechnologyOverreliance: Concept representing the case where an entity, including individuals, have an overreliance on the use of technology
go to full definition
risk:ReputationalRisk: Risks and issues that affect the reputation of the organisation
go to full definition
risk:LoseCredibility: Concept representing Loss of Credibility
go to full definition
risk:LoseCustomerConfidence: Concept representing Loss of Customer Confidence
go to full definition
risk:ServiceProvisionDelayed: Concept representing service provision delayed
go to full definition
risk:ServiceQualityReduced: Concept representing service quality reduced
go to full definition
risk:ServiceSecurityReduced: Concept representing service security reduced
go to full definition
risk:ServiceTermination: Concept representing service termination
go to full definition
risk:UserRisks: Concepts associated with risks that arise due to User or Human use
go to full definition
risk:ErroneousUse: Concept representing erroneous use (of something)
go to full definition
risk:HumanErrors: Concept representing activities that are errors caused by humans without intention and which was not caused by following rules or policies or instructions that were not from the person
go to full definition
risk:AccidentalMisuse: Concept representing accidental misuse (of something)
go to full definition
risk:IntentionalMisuse: Concept represent an intentional misuse (of something)
go to full definition
risk:SocietalRiskConcept: Risk concepts, including any potential risk sources, consequences, or impacts, that are societal in nature or relate to a social setting or process
go to full definition
risk:Discrimination: Discrimination is the treatment of a person or particular group of people differently, in a way that is worse than the way people are usually treate
go to full definition
risk:AgeDiscrimination: Discrimination based on a person's age, often impacting older or younger individuals
go to full definition
risk:BelievesDiscrimination: Discrimination based on a person's beliefs or practices
go to full definition
risk:CasteDiscrimination: Discrimination based on a person's caste, a form of social stratification found in some cultures
go to full definition
risk:DirectDiscrimination: Occurs when a person is treated less favorably than another in a comparable situation based on a protected characteristic (e.g., race, sex, disability)
go to full definition
risk:DisabilityDiscrimination: Discrimination against individuals based on physical or mental disabilities
go to full definition
risk:ExcellenceDiscrimination: Favoritism towards individuals deemed more competent or superior, often at the expense of others
go to full definition
risk:GeographicDiscrimination: Discrimination based on a person's geographical origin or residence
go to full definition
risk:IndirectDiscrimination: Occurs when an apparently neutral provision, criterion, or practice puts individuals of a certain group at a disadvantage compared to others, unless it can be objectively justified
go to full definition
risk:LanguageDiscrimination: Discrimination based on a person's language, often linked to national origin or ethnicity
go to full definition
risk:NationalityDiscrimination: Discrimination based on a person's nationality or citizenship
go to full definition
risk:Racism: Prejudice or discrimination against people based on their race
go to full definition
risk:EthnicDiscrimination: Discrimination against individuals based on their ethnicity or cultural heritage
go to full definition
risk:RacialDiscrimination: Discrimination against individuals because of their racial background or skin color
go to full definition
risk:ReligiousDiscrimination: Discrimination based on a person's relligion or religious beliefs or practices
go to full definition
risk:ReverseDiscrimination: Discrimination against members of a majority or historically dominant group, often in the context of efforts to promote equality
go to full definition
risk:Sexism: Discrimination based on a person's sex or gender, typically involving unequal treatment or stereotyping
go to full definition
risk:GenderDiscrimination: Discrimination based on a person's gender identity or gender expression
go to full definition
risk:SexDiscrimination: Discrimination based on a person's biological sex
go to full definition
risk:Transphobia: Hostility or prejudice against transgender people or those perceived as not conforming to traditional gender norms
go to full definition
risk:SexualOrientationDiscrimination: Discrimination based on a person's sexual orientation, typically against those who are not heterosexual
go to full definition
risk:Homophobia: Hostility or prejudice against individuals who are or are perceived to be homosexual
go to full definition
risk:WorkplaceDiscrimination: Discrimination occuring at workplace or in the context of work environments
go to full definition
risk:EnvironmentalRisk: Risks and issues that have their origin in environment or can affect the environment at large
go to full definition
risk:DisproportionateEnergyConsumption: The occurence or potential occurence of disproportionate energy consumption when considering the value obtained from undertaking the activity and the amount of energy being utilised
go to full definition
risk:Earthquake: The occurence or potential occurence of earthquakes
go to full definition
risk:RightsDenied: The refusal or withholding or denial of the existence or applicability of rights
go to full definition
risk:RightsEroded: The gradual weakening or reduction of the scope and protection of rights
go to full definition
risk:RightsExercisePrevented: Actions or measures that prevent an individual or group from exercising their legal rights.
go to full definition
risk:RightsLimited: A limitation or restrictions on the scope or exercise of rights
go to full definition
risk:RightsObstructed: Interference with or blocking of the exercise of rights
go to full definition
risk:RightsUnfulfilled: Failure to meet or complete the fulfilment of rights
go to full definition
risk:RightsViolated: The infringement or breach of rights in a manner that constitutes a 'violation' of those rights
go to full definition
risk:TechnicalRiskConcept: Risk concepts, including any potential risk sources, consequences, or impacts, that are technical in nature or relate to a technical or technological process
go to full definition
risk:Bias: Bias is defined as the systematic difference in treatment of certain objects, people, or groups in comparison to others
go to full definition
risk:CognitiveBias: Bias that occurs when humans are processing and interpreting information
go to full definition
risk:ConfirmationBias: Bias that occurs when hypotheses, regardless of their veracity, are more likely to be confirmed by the intentional or unintentional interpretation of information
go to full definition
risk:GroupAttributionBias: Bias that occurs when a human assumes that what is true for an individual or object is also true for everyone, or all objects, in that group
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risk:ImplicitBias: Bias that occurs when a human makes an association or assumption based on their mental models and memories
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risk:InGroupBias: Bias that occurs when showing partiality to one's own group or own characteristics
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risk:OutGroupHomogeneityBias: Bias that occurs when seeing out-group members as more alike than in-group members when comparing attitudes, values, personality traits, and other characteristics
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risk:RequirementsBias: Bias that occurs in or during requirements creation
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risk:RuleBasedSystemDesign: Bias that occurs due to developer experience and expert advice having a significant influence on rule-based system design
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risk:SocietalBias: Bias that occurs when similiar cognitive bias (conscious or unconscious) is being held by many individuals in society
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risk:DataBias: Bias that occurs when data properties that if unaddressed lead to systems that perform better or worse for different groups
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risk:DataAggregationBias: Bias that occurs when aggregating data covering different groups of objects has different statistical distributions that introduce bias into the data
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risk:DataProcessingBias: Bias that occurs due to pre-processing (or post-processing) of data, even though the original data would not have led to any bias
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risk:InformativenessBias: Bias that occurs when the mapping between inputs present in the data and outputs are more difficult to identify for some group
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risk:SimpsonsParadoxBias: Bias that occurs when a trend that is indicated in individual groups of data reverses when the groups of data are combined
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risk:StatisticalBias: Bias that occurs as the type of consistent numerical offset in an estimate relative to the true underlying value, inherent to most estimates
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risk:ConfoundingVariablesBias: Bias that occurs as a confounding variable that influences both the dependent variable and independent variable causing a spurious association
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risk:NonNormalityBias: Bias that occurs when the dataset is subject to a different (i.e. non-normal) distribution (e.g., Chi-Square, Beta, Lorentz, Cauchy, Weibull or Pareto) where the results can be biased and misleading
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risk:SelectionBias: Bias that occurs when a dataset's samples are chosen in a way that is not reflective of their real-world distribution
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risk:CoverageBias: Bias that occurs when a population represented in a dataset does not match the actual or real population that are being used
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risk:NonResponseBias: Bias that occurs when people from certain groups opt-out of surveys at different rates than users from other groups. This is also called as Participation bias
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risk:SamplingBias: Bias that occurs when data records are not collected randomly from the intended population
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risk:DataBias: Bias that occurs when data properties that if unaddressed lead to systems that perform better or worse for different groups
go to full definition
risk:DataAggregationBias: Bias that occurs when aggregating data covering different groups of objects has different statistical distributions that introduce bias into the data
go to full definition
risk:DataProcessingBias: Bias that occurs due to pre-processing (or post-processing) of data, even though the original data would not have led to any bias
go to full definition
risk:InformativenessBias: Bias that occurs when the mapping between inputs present in the data and outputs are more difficult to identify for some group
go to full definition
risk:SimpsonsParadoxBias: Bias that occurs when a trend that is indicated in individual groups of data reverses when the groups of data are combined
go to full definition
risk:StatisticalBias: Bias that occurs as the type of consistent numerical offset in an estimate relative to the true underlying value, inherent to most estimates
go to full definition
risk:ConfoundingVariablesBias: Bias that occurs as a confounding variable that influences both the dependent variable and independent variable causing a spurious association
go to full definition
risk:NonNormalityBias: Bias that occurs when the dataset is subject to a different (i.e. non-normal) distribution (e.g., Chi-Square, Beta, Lorentz, Cauchy, Weibull or Pareto) where the results can be biased and misleading
go to full definition
risk:SelectionBias: Bias that occurs when a dataset's samples are chosen in a way that is not reflective of their real-world distribution
go to full definition
risk:CoverageBias: Bias that occurs when a population represented in a dataset does not match the actual or real population that are being used
go to full definition
risk:NonResponseBias: Bias that occurs when people from certain groups opt-out of surveys at different rates than users from other groups. This is also called as Participation bias
go to full definition
risk:SamplingBias: Bias that occurs when data records are not collected randomly from the intended population
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risk:DataInaccurate: Concept representing data being inaccurate
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risk:DataIncomplete: Concept representing data being incomplete
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risk:DataInconsistent: Concept representing data being inconsistent
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risk:DataMisclassified: Concept representing data being misclassified
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risk:DataMisinterpretation: Concept representing data being misinterpretation
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risk:DataUnavailable: Concept representing data being unavailable
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risk:DataUnrepresentative: Concept representing data being unrepresentative
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risk:DataUnstructured: Concept representing data being unstructured
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risk:DataUnverified: Concept representing data being unverified
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risk:ExternalSecurityThreat: Concepts associated with security threats that are likely to originate externally
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risk:CompromiseAccount: Concept representing a compromised account that is then used by the compromiser
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risk:CompromiseAccountCredentials: Concept representing Account Credentials to be compromised
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risk:MaliciousActivity: Intentional actions designed to harm, exploit, manipulate, or disrupt individuals, systems, or organizations for personal gain or detriment to others
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risk:SystemMalfunction: Concept representing System Malfunction
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risk:TaskExecutionRisk: Concept representing risks and issues associated with execution of tasks, operations, activities, and other similar processes
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risk:TaskExecutionIncorrect: Concept representing incorrect execution of task(s)
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risk:TaskTimingIncorrect: Concept representing incorrect timing for task(s) i.e. the task execution does not occur at the correct time
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6.5 Potential Impacts
A PotentialImpact represents a concept which can be an impact or act like an impact in specific concepts. The concept can also be used to create domain or sector or use-case specific groupings of concepts which can act as impacts in context. Concepts which can act as a potential impact are defined as an instance of PotentialImpact.
risk:LegalRiskConcept: Risk concepts, including any potential risk sources, consequences, or impacts, that are legal in nature or relate to a legal system or process
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risk:LegallyRelevantConsequence: A consequence that is legally relevant i.e. actionable under law
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risk:NonMaterialDamage: Concept representing Non-Material Damage
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risk:OrganisationalRiskConcept: Risk concepts, including any potential risk sources, consequences, or impacts, that are organisational in nature or relate to an organisational process
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risk:FinancialImpact: Things that cause or have the potential to impact financial resources
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risk:FinancialLoss: Concept representing Financial Loss which may be actual loss of existing financial assets or hypothetical loss of financial opportunity
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risk:JudicialCosts: Something that involves or causes judicial costs to be paid
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risk:JudicialPenalty: Something that involves or causes judicial penalties to be paid
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risk:Renumeration: Something that acts as or provides renumeration which is in monetary or financial form
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risk:Compensation: Something that acts as or provides compensation - which can be monetary and financial or in other forms
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risk:Benefit: Concept representing benefits - both material and immaterial
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risk:Payment: Something that acts as or provides payment e.g. to access a service or purchase resources
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risk:Reward: Something that acts as or provides rewards i.e. a benefit given for some service or activity that is not a payment or fee
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risk:ReputationalRisk: Risks and issues that affect the reputation of the organisation
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risk:LoseCredibility: Concept representing Loss of Credibility
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risk:LoseCustomerConfidence: Concept representing Loss of Customer Confidence
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risk:ServiceProvisionDelayed: Concept representing service provision delayed
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risk:ServiceQualityReduced: Concept representing service quality reduced
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risk:ServiceSecurityReduced: Concept representing service security reduced
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risk:ServiceTermination: Concept representing service termination
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risk:SocietalRiskConcept: Risk concepts, including any potential risk sources, consequences, or impacts, that are societal in nature or relate to a social setting or process
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risk:Discrimination: Discrimination is the treatment of a person or particular group of people differently, in a way that is worse than the way people are usually treate
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risk:AgeDiscrimination: Discrimination based on a person's age, often impacting older or younger individuals
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risk:BelievesDiscrimination: Discrimination based on a person's beliefs or practices
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risk:CasteDiscrimination: Discrimination based on a person's caste, a form of social stratification found in some cultures
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risk:DirectDiscrimination: Occurs when a person is treated less favorably than another in a comparable situation based on a protected characteristic (e.g., race, sex, disability)
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risk:DisabilityDiscrimination: Discrimination against individuals based on physical or mental disabilities
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risk:ExcellenceDiscrimination: Favoritism towards individuals deemed more competent or superior, often at the expense of others
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risk:GeographicDiscrimination: Discrimination based on a person's geographical origin or residence
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risk:IndirectDiscrimination: Occurs when an apparently neutral provision, criterion, or practice puts individuals of a certain group at a disadvantage compared to others, unless it can be objectively justified
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risk:LanguageDiscrimination: Discrimination based on a person's language, often linked to national origin or ethnicity
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risk:NationalityDiscrimination: Discrimination based on a person's nationality or citizenship
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risk:Racism: Prejudice or discrimination against people based on their race
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risk:EthnicDiscrimination: Discrimination against individuals based on their ethnicity or cultural heritage
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risk:RacialDiscrimination: Discrimination against individuals because of their racial background or skin color
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risk:ReligiousDiscrimination: Discrimination based on a person's relligion or religious beliefs or practices
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risk:ReverseDiscrimination: Discrimination against members of a majority or historically dominant group, often in the context of efforts to promote equality
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risk:Sexism: Discrimination based on a person's sex or gender, typically involving unequal treatment or stereotyping
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risk:GenderDiscrimination: Discrimination based on a person's gender identity or gender expression
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risk:SexDiscrimination: Discrimination based on a person's biological sex
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risk:Transphobia: Hostility or prejudice against transgender people or those perceived as not conforming to traditional gender norms
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risk:SexualOrientationDiscrimination: Discrimination based on a person's sexual orientation, typically against those who are not heterosexual
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risk:Homophobia: Hostility or prejudice against individuals who are or are perceived to be homosexual
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risk:WorkplaceDiscrimination: Discrimination occuring at workplace or in the context of work environments
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risk:EnvironmentalRisk: Risks and issues that have their origin in environment or can affect the environment at large
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risk:DisproportionateEnergyConsumption: The occurence or potential occurence of disproportionate energy consumption when considering the value obtained from undertaking the activity and the amount of energy being utilised
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risk:Earthquake: The occurence or potential occurence of earthquakes
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risk:RightsDenied: The refusal or withholding or denial of the existence or applicability of rights
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risk:RightsEroded: The gradual weakening or reduction of the scope and protection of rights
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risk:RightsExercisePrevented: Actions or measures that prevent an individual or group from exercising their legal rights.
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risk:RightsLimited: A limitation or restrictions on the scope or exercise of rights
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risk:RightsObstructed: Interference with or blocking of the exercise of rights
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risk:RightsUnfulfilled: Failure to meet or complete the fulfilment of rights
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risk:RightsViolated: The infringement or breach of rights in a manner that constitutes a 'violation' of those rights
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risk:TechnicalRiskConcept: Risk concepts, including any potential risk sources, consequences, or impacts, that are technical in nature or relate to a technical or technological process
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6.6 Technical Risk Concepts
A TechnicalRiskConcept represents a concept that is technical in nature or relate to a technical or technological process, and which then can be applicable as a risk source, risk, consequence, or impact in specific concepts.
risk:Bias: Bias is defined as the systematic difference in treatment of certain objects, people, or groups in comparison to others
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risk:CognitiveBias: Bias that occurs when humans are processing and interpreting information
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risk:ConfirmationBias: Bias that occurs when hypotheses, regardless of their veracity, are more likely to be confirmed by the intentional or unintentional interpretation of information
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risk:GroupAttributionBias: Bias that occurs when a human assumes that what is true for an individual or object is also true for everyone, or all objects, in that group
go to full definition
risk:ImplicitBias: Bias that occurs when a human makes an association or assumption based on their mental models and memories
go to full definition
risk:InGroupBias: Bias that occurs when showing partiality to one's own group or own characteristics
go to full definition
risk:OutGroupHomogeneityBias: Bias that occurs when seeing out-group members as more alike than in-group members when comparing attitudes, values, personality traits, and other characteristics
go to full definition
risk:RequirementsBias: Bias that occurs in or during requirements creation
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risk:RuleBasedSystemDesign: Bias that occurs due to developer experience and expert advice having a significant influence on rule-based system design
go to full definition
risk:SocietalBias: Bias that occurs when similiar cognitive bias (conscious or unconscious) is being held by many individuals in society
go to full definition
risk:DataBias: Bias that occurs when data properties that if unaddressed lead to systems that perform better or worse for different groups
go to full definition
risk:DataAggregationBias: Bias that occurs when aggregating data covering different groups of objects has different statistical distributions that introduce bias into the data
go to full definition
risk:DataProcessingBias: Bias that occurs due to pre-processing (or post-processing) of data, even though the original data would not have led to any bias
go to full definition
risk:InformativenessBias: Bias that occurs when the mapping between inputs present in the data and outputs are more difficult to identify for some group
go to full definition
risk:SimpsonsParadoxBias: Bias that occurs when a trend that is indicated in individual groups of data reverses when the groups of data are combined
go to full definition
risk:StatisticalBias: Bias that occurs as the type of consistent numerical offset in an estimate relative to the true underlying value, inherent to most estimates
go to full definition
risk:ConfoundingVariablesBias: Bias that occurs as a confounding variable that influences both the dependent variable and independent variable causing a spurious association
go to full definition
risk:NonNormalityBias: Bias that occurs when the dataset is subject to a different (i.e. non-normal) distribution (e.g., Chi-Square, Beta, Lorentz, Cauchy, Weibull or Pareto) where the results can be biased and misleading
go to full definition
risk:SelectionBias: Bias that occurs when a dataset's samples are chosen in a way that is not reflective of their real-world distribution
go to full definition
risk:CoverageBias: Bias that occurs when a population represented in a dataset does not match the actual or real population that are being used
go to full definition
risk:NonResponseBias: Bias that occurs when people from certain groups opt-out of surveys at different rates than users from other groups. This is also called as Participation bias
go to full definition
risk:SamplingBias: Bias that occurs when data records are not collected randomly from the intended population
go to full definition
risk:DataBias: Bias that occurs when data properties that if unaddressed lead to systems that perform better or worse for different groups
go to full definition
risk:DataAggregationBias: Bias that occurs when aggregating data covering different groups of objects has different statistical distributions that introduce bias into the data
go to full definition
risk:DataProcessingBias: Bias that occurs due to pre-processing (or post-processing) of data, even though the original data would not have led to any bias
go to full definition
risk:InformativenessBias: Bias that occurs when the mapping between inputs present in the data and outputs are more difficult to identify for some group
go to full definition
risk:SimpsonsParadoxBias: Bias that occurs when a trend that is indicated in individual groups of data reverses when the groups of data are combined
go to full definition
risk:StatisticalBias: Bias that occurs as the type of consistent numerical offset in an estimate relative to the true underlying value, inherent to most estimates
go to full definition
risk:ConfoundingVariablesBias: Bias that occurs as a confounding variable that influences both the dependent variable and independent variable causing a spurious association
go to full definition
risk:NonNormalityBias: Bias that occurs when the dataset is subject to a different (i.e. non-normal) distribution (e.g., Chi-Square, Beta, Lorentz, Cauchy, Weibull or Pareto) where the results can be biased and misleading
go to full definition
risk:SelectionBias: Bias that occurs when a dataset's samples are chosen in a way that is not reflective of their real-world distribution
go to full definition
risk:CoverageBias: Bias that occurs when a population represented in a dataset does not match the actual or real population that are being used
go to full definition
risk:NonResponseBias: Bias that occurs when people from certain groups opt-out of surveys at different rates than users from other groups. This is also called as Participation bias
go to full definition
risk:SamplingBias: Bias that occurs when data records are not collected randomly from the intended population
go to full definition
risk:DataInaccurate: Concept representing data being inaccurate
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risk:DataIncomplete: Concept representing data being incomplete
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risk:DataInconsistent: Concept representing data being inconsistent
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risk:DataMisclassified: Concept representing data being misclassified
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risk:DataMisinterpretation: Concept representing data being misinterpretation
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risk:DataUnavailable: Concept representing data being unavailable
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risk:DataUnrepresentative: Concept representing data being unrepresentative
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risk:DataUnstructured: Concept representing data being unstructured
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risk:DataUnverified: Concept representing data being unverified
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risk:ExternalSecurityThreat: Concepts associated with security threats that are likely to originate externally
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risk:CompromiseAccount: Concept representing a compromised account that is then used by the compromiser
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risk:CompromiseAccountCredentials: Concept representing Account Credentials to be compromised
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risk:MaliciousActivity: Intentional actions designed to harm, exploit, manipulate, or disrupt individuals, systems, or organizations for personal gain or detriment to others
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risk:SecurityAttack: Concept representing an attack on security with the aim of undermining it
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risk:BruteForceAuthorisations: Concept representing Brute Force Authorisations i.e. bypassing authorisations through brute forcing techniques
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risk:SystemMalfunction: Concept representing System Malfunction
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risk:TaskExecutionRisk: Concept representing risks and issues associated with execution of tasks, operations, activities, and other similar processes
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risk:TaskExecutionIncorrect: Concept representing incorrect execution of task(s)
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risk:TaskTimingIncorrect: Concept representing incorrect timing for task(s) i.e. the task execution does not occur at the correct time
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6.7 Organisational Risk Concepts
A OrganisationalRiskConcept represents a concept that is organisational in nature or relates to an organisational process, and which then can be applicable as a risk source, risk, consequence, or impact in specific concepts.
risk:FinancialImpact: Things that cause or have the potential to impact financial resources
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risk:FinancialLoss: Concept representing Financial Loss which may be actual loss of existing financial assets or hypothetical loss of financial opportunity
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risk:JudicialCosts: Something that involves or causes judicial costs to be paid
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risk:JudicialPenalty: Something that involves or causes judicial penalties to be paid
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risk:Renumeration: Something that acts as or provides renumeration which is in monetary or financial form
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risk:Compensation: Something that acts as or provides compensation - which can be monetary and financial or in other forms
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risk:Benefit: Concept representing benefits - both material and immaterial
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risk:Payment: Something that acts as or provides payment e.g. to access a service or purchase resources
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risk:Reward: Something that acts as or provides rewards i.e. a benefit given for some service or activity that is not a payment or fee
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risk:OrganisationalManagementRisk: Concept representing issues and risks associated with the management of operations and resources by the organisation
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risk:HumanOversightIneffective: Concept representing cases where human oversight is ineffective for the intended effect, such as for when human can observe a problem but cannot do anything about it
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risk:HumanOversightInsufficient: Concept representing cases where human oversight is insufficient for the intended effect, such as not being capable of identifying a problem
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risk:InstructionsIncorrect: Concept representing cases where instructions are incorrect for achieving the intended effect
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risk:InstructionsInsufficient: Concept representing cases where instructions are not sufficient for the intended effect
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risk:LackOfSystemTransparency: Concept representing lack of transpareny to humans related to the operation of a system
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risk:StaffIncompetence: Concept representing incompetence of staff
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risk:TechnologyOverreliance: Concept representing the case where an entity, including individuals, have an overreliance on the use of technology
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risk:ReputationalRisk: Risks and issues that affect the reputation of the organisation
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risk:LoseCredibility: Concept representing Loss of Credibility
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risk:LoseCustomerConfidence: Concept representing Loss of Customer Confidence
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risk:ServiceProvisionDelayed: Concept representing service provision delayed
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risk:ServiceQualityReduced: Concept representing service quality reduced
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risk:ServiceSecurityReduced: Concept representing service security reduced
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risk:ServiceTermination: Concept representing service termination
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risk:UserRisks: Concepts associated with risks that arise due to User or Human use
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risk:ErroneousUse: Concept representing erroneous use (of something)
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risk:HumanErrors: Concept representing activities that are errors caused by humans without intention and which was not caused by following rules or policies or instructions that were not from the person
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risk:AccidentalMisuse: Concept representing accidental misuse (of something)
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risk:IntentionalMisuse: Concept represent an intentional misuse (of something)
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6.8 Societal Risk Concepts
A SocietalRiskConcept represents a concept that is societal in nature or relates to a societal process or event or effect, and which then can be applicable as a risk source, risk, consequence, or impact in specific concepts.
risk:Discrimination: Discrimination is the treatment of a person or particular group of people differently, in a way that is worse than the way people are usually treate
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risk:AgeDiscrimination: Discrimination based on a person's age, often impacting older or younger individuals
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risk:BelievesDiscrimination: Discrimination based on a person's beliefs or practices
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risk:CasteDiscrimination: Discrimination based on a person's caste, a form of social stratification found in some cultures
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risk:DirectDiscrimination: Occurs when a person is treated less favorably than another in a comparable situation based on a protected characteristic (e.g., race, sex, disability)
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risk:DisabilityDiscrimination: Discrimination against individuals based on physical or mental disabilities
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risk:ExcellenceDiscrimination: Favoritism towards individuals deemed more competent or superior, often at the expense of others
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risk:GeographicDiscrimination: Discrimination based on a person's geographical origin or residence
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risk:IndirectDiscrimination: Occurs when an apparently neutral provision, criterion, or practice puts individuals of a certain group at a disadvantage compared to others, unless it can be objectively justified
go to full definition
risk:LanguageDiscrimination: Discrimination based on a person's language, often linked to national origin or ethnicity
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risk:NationalityDiscrimination: Discrimination based on a person's nationality or citizenship
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risk:Racism: Prejudice or discrimination against people based on their race
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risk:EthnicDiscrimination: Discrimination against individuals based on their ethnicity or cultural heritage
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risk:RacialDiscrimination: Discrimination against individuals because of their racial background or skin color
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risk:ReligiousDiscrimination: Discrimination based on a person's relligion or religious beliefs or practices
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risk:ReverseDiscrimination: Discrimination against members of a majority or historically dominant group, often in the context of efforts to promote equality
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risk:Sexism: Discrimination based on a person's sex or gender, typically involving unequal treatment or stereotyping
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risk:GenderDiscrimination: Discrimination based on a person's gender identity or gender expression
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risk:SexDiscrimination: Discrimination based on a person's biological sex
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risk:Transphobia: Hostility or prejudice against transgender people or those perceived as not conforming to traditional gender norms
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risk:SexualOrientationDiscrimination: Discrimination based on a person's sexual orientation, typically against those who are not heterosexual
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risk:Homophobia: Hostility or prejudice against individuals who are or are perceived to be homosexual
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risk:WorkplaceDiscrimination: Discrimination occuring at workplace or in the context of work environments
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risk:EnvironmentalRisk: Risks and issues that have their origin in environment or can affect the environment at large
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risk:DisproportionateEnergyConsumption: The occurence or potential occurence of disproportionate energy consumption when considering the value obtained from undertaking the activity and the amount of energy being utilised
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risk:Earthquake: The occurence or potential occurence of earthquakes
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risk:RightsDenied: The refusal or withholding or denial of the existence or applicability of rights
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risk:RightsEroded: The gradual weakening or reduction of the scope and protection of rights
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risk:RightsExercisePrevented: Actions or measures that prevent an individual or group from exercising their legal rights.
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risk:RightsLimited: A limitation or restrictions on the scope or exercise of rights
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risk:RightsObstructed: Interference with or blocking of the exercise of rights
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risk:RightsUnfulfilled: Failure to meet or complete the fulfilment of rights
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risk:RightsViolated: The infringement or breach of rights in a manner that constitutes a 'violation' of those rights
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6.9 Legal Risk Concepts
A TechnicalRiskConcept represents a concept that is legal in nature or relates to a legal process, and which then can be applicable as a risk source, risk, consequence, or impact in specific concepts.
risk:LegalComplianceRisk: Risks and consequences regarding legal compliance and its violation
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risk:CopyrightViolation: Concept representing Copyright Violation
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risk:IllegalDataProcessing: Concept representing Illegal Processing of Data
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risk:PublicOrderBreach: Concept representing Public Order Breach
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risk:ViolatingContractualObligation: Concept representing Violation of Contractual Obligations
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risk:ViolatingLegalObligation: Concept representing Violation of Legal Obligations
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risk:ViolatingStatutoryObligations: Concept representing Violation of Statutory Obligations
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risk:LegallyRelevantConsequence: A consequence that is legally relevant i.e. actionable under law
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Impacts on (legal) rights are modelled through the concept RightsImpact, and are associated using the relations dpv:hasRisk to indicate a risk of an impact on rights and dpv:hasImpact to indicate an impact of rights. Here, 'right' refers to a broad concept encompassing rights, freedoms, privileges, claims, entitlements, or other similar concepts which form the basis for legal interpretations. While in this broad sense, 'right' also refers to corporate rights such as for intellectual property or copyright, the intent here is to model the societal notion of rights, such as the 'right of a customer' or 'rights protected by a constitution'.
The RightsImpact concept is further expanded to distinguish between different kinds of impacts, which are then combined with a specific right or group of rights to indicate the impact in a more granular manner. These concepts are RightsDenied, RightsEroded, RightsExercisePrevented, RightsLimited, RightsObstructed, RightsUnfulfilled, and RightsViolated. Not all impact categories may apply for a particular right, and not all impacts may include all applicable categories. Further, the interpretation of some of these categories can be difficult to quantify, such as whether a particular right has been 'violated'. The intent therefore here is foremost to provide a vocabulary to express impacts on rights in terms of the right itself (e.g. right denied or right exercise being prevented), which can then be used to make assessments of a broader implication regarding the right (e.g. right is eroded or is violated).
Control that avoids an event with the goal of removing it completely
Usage Note
Avoiding is distinct from Mitigation and Modification as the goal to avoid an event is to prevent it from occuring at all, whereas mitigation and modification accept an event will occur and focus on managing it
Control that proactively changes the consequence event such that one event is replaced with the occurence or applicability of another event in the context
Here component refers to both physical and virtual components. The failure of a component may or may not also cause a failure in other related components or the systems they are part of
Here component refers to both physical and virtual components. The malfunction of a component may or may not also cause a malfunction in other related components or the systems they are part of
Bias that occurs when hypotheses, regardless of their veracity, are more likely to be confirmed by the intentional or unintentional interpretation of information
Source
Date Created
2024-09-13
Contributors
Daniel Doherty, Delaram Golpayegani, Harshvardhan J. Pandit
Control that aims to contain the event in terms of limiting its occurence or effects
Usage Note
Containment implies either changing the event or the context such that the event's effects are restricted, such as by establishing a physical or digital boundary within which the effects can occur or to prevent the effects from affecting things inside the boundary
Detection refers to the observation, derivation, inference, or any other method for drawing conclusions that an event has occurred or is likely to occur with a given certainty. For controls that identify information about the event in terms of metrics or characteristics, see risk:IdentificationControl
Occurs when a person is treated less favorably than another in a comparable situation based on a protected characteristic (e.g., race, sex, disability)
The occurence or potential occurence of disproportionate energy consumption when considering the value obtained from undertaking the activity and the amount of energy being utilised
Control that eliminates an event entirely such that the event does not occur
Usage Note
Elimination requires the event's likelihood to be reduced to zero such that the event cannot occur in the context. This can be done by establishing methods to prevent the event from occuring (e.g. gatekeeping filters) or by changing the underlying context context (e.g. replacing faulty device). The difference between risk:ModificationControl and risk:EliminationControl is that modification works to change the event characteristics whereas elimination works on the context to prevent the event
Concept representing activities that are errors caused by humans without intention and which was not caused by following rules or policies or instructions that were not from the person
Concept representing cases where human oversight is ineffective for the intended effect, such as for when human can observe a problem but cannot do anything about it
Control that identifies the characteristics of an event
Usage Note
Identification in the context of an event refers to its characteristics such as likelihood, severity, as well as contextual metrics such as amount of data or power being used, or affected entities or things, and which can be used to categorise the event in terms of risk level or other contextual groupings
The state where a incident is suspected, but has not yet been confirmed. This can be due to lack of information, or because the process of detection and investigation is still ongoing
Occurs when an apparently neutral provision, criterion, or practice puts individuals of a certain group at a disadvantage compared to others, unless it can be objectively justified
Control that interrupts an event without removing the possibility for it to be resumed and where the aim is to stop the event
Usage Note
Interruption refers to the event being temporarily halted, such as an emergency measure while further suitable measures are identified and put in place. To indicate stopping the event completely rather than a temporary interruption, see risk:RemediationControl which fixes the underlying issue and risk:EliminationEvent which prevents the event from occuring
Control that intervenes in the operations of the event to change some context with the aim of changing the event or the effects
Usage Note
Intervention implies taking steps to resolve the effects or to prevent further escalation while the event is still ongoing. For halting the event, see risk:InterruptionControl, for recovering and undoing the effects, see risk:RecoveryControl and risk:ReversalControl. Intervention is a temporary or stop-gap measure which is used while the event is ongoing to prevent it from escalating or creating additional issues
Control that identifies information through an investigative process about an event and its effects after it has occured
Usage Note
Investigative controls are used to identify information about an event and its effects which can be used to identify further effective measures to address them, and to identify processes to remedy and recover from it. Investigation control therefore is focused on analysis of an event after its occurence with the goal of identifying applicability and effectiveness of other controls to address it
Risk concepts, including any potential risk sources, consequences, or impacts, that are legal in nature or relate to a legal system or process
Usage Note
Legal in this context refers exclusively to the law applied within a jurisdiction and does not include internal policies or rules within an organisation
Log refers to a record of information regarding the event, including whether it has occured, was prevented from occuring, and any actions or processes taken in response to it or resulting from it
Control that aims to reduce the likelihood or effect of an event with the goal of managing an event accepted to occur
Usage Note
Mitigation requires accepting that an event will occur, and thereby focusing on managing it by reducing its likelihood or effects by adding additional processes to specifically address the event or its effects
Control that modifies the context to change the event's characteristics such that the event still occurs but with the modified characteristics with the goal of managing an event that is accepted to occur
Usage Note
Modification necessitates a change in the context to result in a change in the event's characteristics. Where such changes reduce the likelihood or effects of the event, the modification also works as a mitigation for the event
Control that monitors for the occurence of an event
Usage Note
Monitoring is a broad term that refers to identifying information about an event, including its occurence, characteristics such as severity or specific contextual metrics, affected things and entities, and having the ability to obtain and use this information to address the event. Monitoring is also used to refer to the activities associated with ensuring controls are active and effective. For this reason, specific concepts are defined which extend this control to express explicit actions included in the general use of 'monitoring' in risk management
Bias that occurs when the dataset is subject to a different (i.e. non-normal) distribution (e.g., Chi-Square, Beta, Lorentz, Cauchy, Weibull or Pareto) where the results can be biased and misleading
Source
Date Created
2024-09-13
Contributors
Daniel Doherty, Delaram Golpayegani, Harshvardhan J. Pandit
Bias that occurs when people from certain groups opt-out of surveys at different rates than users from other groups. This is also called as Participation bias
Source
Date Created
2024-09-13
Contributors
Daniel Doherty, Delaram Golpayegani, Harshvardhan J. Pandit
Risk concepts, including any potential risk sources, consequences, or impacts, that are organisational in nature or relate to an organisational process
Usage Note
Organisational in this context refers to an organisation which is not human but is managed by humans
Bias that occurs when seeing out-group members as more alike than in-group members when comparing attitudes, values, personality traits, and other characteristics
Source
Date Created
2024-09-13
Contributors
Daniel Doherty, Delaram Golpayegani, Harshvardhan J. Pandit
Control that provides oversight for an event in terms of having information about it and being able to supervise or manage it
Usage Note
Oversight can be ambigiously used in terms of having knowledge about an event (see risk:TransparencyControl instead), or being able to identify when it occurs (see risk:DetectionControl instead). The control defined by this concept includes the ability to act on the event as part of the 'oversight' term used in management
Indicates a concept can potentially be a 'consequence concept within an use-case
Usage Note
PotentialConsequence is a suggestion that the concept can be a 'risk' within an use-case - this suggestion is not exclusive and the concept may also be instances of other potential concepts to indicate the multiple possible roles a concept can take. This suggestion can be ignored if it is not applicable to the use-case
Indicates a concept can potentially be a 'impact' concept within an use-case
Usage Note
PotentialImpact is a suggestion that the concept can be a 'risk' within an use-case - this suggestion is not exclusive and the concept may also be instances of other potential concepts to indicate the multiple possible roles a concept can take. This suggestion can be ignored if it is not applicable to the use-case
Indicates a concept can potentially be a 'risk' concept within an use-case
Usage Note
PotentialRisk is a suggestion that the concept can be a 'risk' within an use-case - this suggestion is not exclusive and the concept may also be instances of other potential concepts to indicate the multiple possible roles a concept can take. This suggestion can be ignored if it is not applicable to the use-case
Indicates a concept can potentially be a 'risk source' concept within an use-case
Usage Note
PotentialRiskSource is a suggestion that the concept can be a 'risk' within an use-case - this suggestion is not exclusive and the concept may also be instances of other potential concepts to indicate the multiple possible roles a concept can take. This suggestion can be ignored if it is not applicable to the use-case
Control that is established or functions before an event occurs
Usage Note
The use of 'proactive' here refers to this control being established to address events before they occur. It does not indicate putting in place controls before the event such as planning ahead for potential use of controls to respond to an incident
Control that is established or functions after an event occurs
Usage Note
The use of 'reactive' here refers to this control being established i.e. becoming active to address the effects of an event after they occur. It does not imply that the controls are put in place after the event or that there is no planned procedure for handling an incident
Control that aims to restore the context following an event
Usage Note
Recovery implies taking steps to correct the effects which may not be the same as the initial conditions before the event, whereas risk:ReversalControl refers to undoing the effects such that the initial condition is restored
Reduction here refers to a lessening of the effects after the event has occured by either reducing their likelihood or their severity in the context. This can involve changing the underlying context such that the effects have a reduced chance of occuring, or to create additional measures such that the effects do not have the initial severity for an entity
Use this concept for reidentification in an internal context. For reidentification performed by external entities see concept UnauthorisedReidentification
Control that aims to fix or remedy the causes of an event to prevent further occurences
Usage Note
Remediation involves making changes in the context to avoid further events and effects, which may be for the specific event or for other similar events and effects. As such, remediation can also be undertaken as a proactive measure in the risk management lifecycle following an incident
Control that aims to reverse or undo the effects of an event
Usage Note
Reversal can be achieved through measures such as restoring information from a backup or replacing things such that the initial context not containing the event's effects is restored
The refusal or withholding or denial of the existence or applicability of rights
Usage Note
The denial of the right refers to the argument that a right does not apply at all for a particular case. Though specified as a plural i.e. 'rights', this concept can be applied to a singular right
The gradual weakening or reduction of the scope and protection of rights
Usage Note
Erosion of rights typically only applies to passive rights which always apply, since for active rights the exercise of that right is what enables it. An active right can be eroded over time it is limited consistently and increasingly such that the scope of the right is reduced over time. Though specified as a plural i.e. 'rights', this concept can be applied to a singular right
Actions or measures that prevent an individual or group from exercising their legal rights.
Usage Note
This concept was called "PreventExercisingOfRights" in DPV 2.0. Violation of a right is a bar for actionable actions by an authority. Other impacts on right may be found to construe a violation of the right, but that is not necessarily always the case i.e. not all impacts are violations of a right. Though specified as a plural i.e. 'rights', this concept can be applied to a singular right
A limitation or restrictions on the scope or exercise of rights
Usage Note
This concept was called "LimitationOfRights" in DPV 2.0. The limitation refers to the applicability and scope of the right, and not in the ability to exercise that right. Limitation is therefore fulfilment of the right and its obligations - but for a scope other than what was intended or expected. Though specified as a plural i.e. 'rights', this concept can be applied to a singular right
Interference with or blocking of the exercise of rights
Usage Note
In obstruction, the right is not denied, limited, or unfulfilled - but the requirements to enable exercise of the rights are increased to the point of discouraging or obstructing the exercise of that right. Though specified as a plural i.e. 'rights', this concept can be applied to a singular right
Failure to meet or complete the fulfilment of rights
Usage Note
Here unfulfilment refers to non-completion of the right's obligations and processes. Though specified as a plural i.e. 'rights', this concept can be applied to a singular right
A technique or method used to analyse and identify risk levels, sources, likelihoods, severities, and other necessary information required to conduct risk management procedures
Systematic application of management policies, procedures, and practices for communicating, consulting, establishing context, and identifying, analysing, evaluating, treating, monitoring and reviewing risk. ISO 31000 definition: coordinated activities to direct and control an organization with regard to risk
Compares individual risks by selecting a consequence/ likelihood pair and displaying them on a matrix with consequence on one axis and likelihood on the other.
Control that aims to share or distribute the event (or risk) with another context or entity
Usage Note
Sharing implies a combined responsibility or sharing of effects from an event - which can be between entities or procesess (or other contexts). The use of 'event' here broadly refers to any event, which may be a risk event or could also be specific measures being adopted in response to an event. For specifically indicating sharing of risk per typical risk management processes, see risk:ShareRisk
Risk concepts, including any potential risk sources, consequences, or impacts, that are societal in nature or relate to a social setting or process
Usage Note
Societal in this context includes both individuals and groups in a social context, as well as wider implications for society - such as environmental impacts or economic consequences of inflation that can affect both human and non-human entities as part of the social structure
Control that substitutes an event with another such that the initial event no longer takes place while the substituted event takes place in place of it
Usage Note
Substitution implies that the replacement event is less risky or is more safe than the replaced event, which is distinct from elimination where no event occurs and thus there is an elimination of risk entirely
Risk concepts, including any potential risk sources, consequences, or impacts, that are technical in nature or relate to a technical or technological process
Control that aims to transfer the event (or risk) to another context or entity
Usage Note
Transfer implies moving (physically or logically) the event to another context or entity. While Risk Management methods indicate risk transfer as occuring between entities, this concept is defined more broadly by including 'context or entity' so as to enable modelling cases where the transfer takes place between processes - which may be managed by the same or different entity. Additionally, typical use of 'Transfer' implies a formal mechanism such as an agreement, which is absent from this concept. If only partial responsibility is tranferred, such as for a specific measure, then this can be considered as an instance of sharing the risk - for which risk:ShareControl is provided
Transparency refers to the availability of information, whether for the same or different entity in relation to who establishes and operates the control, and where transparency implies having the means to obtain and use information about an event
The DPV-Risk extension https://w3id.org/dpv/risk lists risk assessments, consequences, impacts, methodologies, matrices, etc. But does not refer to other concepts in risk management (criterias, governance, sources, threats, evaluation, etc.) These should be added.
The Risk Matrix concepts in the RISK extension are provided with a suggested value 0..1 and a suggested label that implies there is a risk level. However, in RDF, there is no triple stating the suggested risk level, e.g. as dpv:hasRiskLevel risk:HighRisk. This should be provided in the RISK extension for convenience and so that the risk matrix values can be directly used e.g. in risk assessments and impact reporting documents.
To do this, the relevant source spreadsheet can have an additional column called RiskLevel which contains the following enumeration of 7 values representing Extremely Low to Extremely High so that it covers 7x7 matrix, and whose subset represents the 5x5 and 3x3 matrices: EL,VL,L,M,H,VH,EH. The vocab_schema.py and vocab_func.py files can take these values and generate relevant triples similar to how the RiskConcept events are annotated with categories.
Funding Acknowledgements
Funding Sponsors
The DPVCG was established as part of the SPECIAL H2020 Project, which received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement No. 731601 from 2017 to 2019.
Harshvardhan J. Pandit was funded to work on DPV from 2020 to 2022 by the Irish Research Council's Government of Ireland Postdoctoral Fellowship Grant#GOIPD/2020/790.
The ADAPT SFI Centre for Digital Media Technology is funded by Science Foundation Ireland through the SFI Research Centres Programme and is co-funded under the European Regional Development Fund (ERDF) through Grant#13/RC/2106 (2018 to 2020) and Grant#13/RC/2106_P2 (2021 onwards).
Funding Acknowledgements for Contributors
The contributions of Beatriz Esteves and Delaram Golpayegani have received funding through the PROTECT ITN Project from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under the Marie Skłodowska-Curie grant agreement No 813497, in particular through the development of AI Risk Ontology (AIRO) and Vocabulary of AI Risks (VAIR) which have been integrated in to this extension. Beatriz Esteves is funded by SolidLab Vlaanderen (Flemish Government, EWI and RRF project VV023/10), and by the imec.icon project PACSOI (HBC.2023.0752) which was co-financed by imec and VLAIO. Julian Flake received funding from the TITAN project funded under European Union’s Horizon Europe Framework Programme grant#101129822 and from the European Union’s Digital Europe Programme grant#101123471 (EDGE-Skills).
The contributions of Harshvardhan J. Pandit, Delaram Golpayegani, and Rob Brennan have been made with the financial support of Science Foundation Ireland under Grant Agreement No. 13/RC/2106_P2 at the ADAPT SFI Research Centre.
B. Issue summary
Issue 211: Add `RiskLevel` to Risk Matrix concepts
Issue 74: Add Risk Management concepts from ISO 31000 series
Issue 211: Add `RiskLevel` to Risk Matrix concepts
C. Changelog for v2.1
total terms: 549 ; added: 282 ; removed: 104 ;
The changelog provides more information on concepts that have been added/removed in this version. Below is a summary of the changes.
Removed concepts represent a major change from previous drafts as this release provides a new model for how the same concept can be used as risk sources, risks, consequences, and impacts based on a common parent concept dpv:RiskConcept. Removed concepts represent ambiguous concepts (e.g. HarmfulSpeech) which have been renamed to better express the issue (e.g. ExposureToHarmfulSpeech). Some AI-specific concepts have been moved or integrated with the risks provided in AI extension. The Fee concepts has been removed as a 'consequence' and provided in DPV as FeeRequirement.
Each concept in the risk/impact taxonomy is defined as an instance of RiskConcept and annotated with 'potential roles' it is likely to take to be a risk source, risk, consequence, or impact. This makes the RISK taxonomy broadly useful and enables the taxonomy to be used in more use-cases and domains.
Added RiskManagement concepts and properties based on ISO 9000 series.
Added taxonomy of RiskControl concepts and properties based on ISO 9000 series.
Added IncidentInvestigationStatus concepts.
Expanded and refined the taxonomy of concepts with helpful suggestions/guidance on which concepts are (commonly used as) risks sources, risks, consequences, and impacts.
Adds experimental concepts for expressing granular rights impacts.