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security |
Also found in: Dictionary/thesaurus, Wikipedia, Hutchinson | 0.03 sec. |
securityIn finance, written evidence of ownership conferring the right to receive property not currently in the holder's possession. The most common securities are stocks and bonds. Governments, companies, and financial institutions use securities to raise money. Stocks are securities issued in the form of equity ownership. Bonds are securities that take the form of debt. They constitute promises to pay a specified amount at a specified date and to pay interest at a specified rate in the interim. Most government securities are bonds that pay a fixed amount of interest per year; unlike commercial securities, their repayment is guaranteed. Both stocks and bonds are traded publicly on organized exchanges such as the New York Stock Exchange, the London Stock Exchange, and the Tokyo Stock Exchange. External forces such as international troubles, changes in government policies, and trends in foreign stock markets all have an effect on security prices. For individual stocks, the company's current and prospective financial performance play an important role, as do overall trends within its business sector. See also investment; saving. securitySee computer security and information security. security 1. something given or pledged to secure the fulfilment of a promise or obligation 2. a person who undertakes to fulfil another person's obligation 3. the protection of data to ensure that only authorized personnel have access to computer files security [si′kyu̇r·əd·ē] (computer science) The existence and enforcement of techniques which restrict access to data, and the conditions under which data may be obtained. (electricity) The ability of an electric power system to suitably respond to disturbances arising within that system, including both local and widespread disturbances and the loss of major generation and transmission facilities. (ordnance) Measures taken by a command to protect itself from espionage, observation, sabotage, annoyance, or surprise. A condition which results from the establishment and maintenance of protective measures which ensure a state of inviolability from hostile acts or influences. Protection of supplies or supply establishments against enemy attack, fire, theft, and sabotage.
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| So the Homeland Security Department has decided to provide $5 million to ensure short-range radios are in every public school, according to boston. A consortium of more than 60 companies, including Lockheed Martin and Verified Identity Pass, submitted the 141-page specification to the Homeland Security Department. more than he ever did [while at] the Homeland Security Department," he admitted to the Times. |
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