Activity - IS Auditing Process
Activity - IS Auditing Process
Assurance and Audit
Information Systems Acquisition, Development, and Implementation
Information Systems Acquisition, Development, and Implementation
Information Systems Operations and Business Resilience
Information Systems Operations and Business Resilience
Protection of Information Assets
Protection of Information Assets
Accuracy (Assertion): A management declaration that amounts, dates, and other data related to recorded activities have been recorded appropriately without computational error. Example: The auditor verifies that the financial totals transferred from the payroll module to the general ledger match down to the exact decimal point.
Advocacy Threat: A threat to objectivity occurring when a practitioner promotes an auditee's position to the point that their professional impartiality is compromised. Example: An internal auditor defending a department's non-compliant data practices during a meeting with external federal regulators.
Agile Auditing: An iterative audit project management methodology that prioritises human interactions, flexible scopes, and real-time customer collaboration over rigid, long-term planning structures. Example: The audit team runs two-week execution "sprints" to review cloud security, allowing them to pivot their focus if a severe zero-day vulnerability is announced.
Analytical Procedures: Evidence-gathering techniques involving the evaluation of data by examining plausible relationships, fluctuations, trends, and inconsistencies. Example: Comparing the ratio of failed login attempts to total logins over six months to identify sudden spikes indicative of automated attacks.
Attribute Sampling: A statistical, fixed sample-size methodology utilised primarily in compliance testing to estimate the rate of occurrence of a specific, binary quality within a population. Example: Selecting a sample of 50 new user creation tickets specifically to check if the attribute of a "Manager Approval Signature" is present or absent.
Audit Charter: A formal, overarching governance document approved by the board of directors that establishes the audit function's absolute purpose, responsibility, authority, and accountability. Example: A signed charter explicitly granting the audit team the unrestricted legal right to access all corporate servers, physical locations, and personnel records without requiring IT's prior consent.
Audit Risk (Overall): The overarching probability that information or financial reports contain material errors, and that the auditor's procedures will completely fail to detect that an error has occurred. Example: The risk that an auditor issues an unqualified "clean" opinion on the financial systems, despite a massive, unrecorded embezzlement scheme existing in the database.
Availability (Assertion): A management declaration that information, evidence, and other critical data required for business continuity or audit engagements exist and are readily accessible. Example: An auditor requesting change management logs from a decade-old legacy system to ensure the records can still be retrieved and read by modern software.
CAATs (Computer-Assisted Audit Techniques): Specialised software tools (such as generalised audit software, scripts, and debugging tools) used by auditors to extract, gather, and analyse vast datasets electronically. Example: Running an automated Python script to cross-reference a database of 50,000 vendor bank accounts against 50,000 employee direct deposit accounts to detect fraudulent matches.
Compensating Control: A strategically implemented internal control designed specifically to offset a known, unavoidable weakness within the enterprise's primary control architecture. Example: Segregating a legacy manufacturing application that cannot support complex passwords onto a highly restrictive, air-gapped network segment.
Completeness (Assertion): A management declaration ensuring that all activities, transactions, and data that should have been recorded within a system actually have been recorded without omission. Example: The auditor cross-referenced HR termination emails with IT deprovisioning logs to ensure that every fired employee had their access revoked.
Compliance Testing: An audit execution procedure designed strictly to evaluate the operating effectiveness of internal controls in preventing, detecting, or correcting weaknesses. Example: The auditor observes a security guard's workflow to verify that they actually check physical ID badges before allowing personnel into the server room.
Continuous Auditing: An automated technique utilised by auditors to perform tests and assessments in real-time or near-real-time environments to gather evidence instantaneously. Example: The audit department is configuring an automated tool that instantly alerts the Chief Audit Executive if a transaction exceeds $5 million outside of normal business hours.
Continuous Monitoring: An operational management process utilised to observe the day-to-day performance of processes, systems, or data networks. Example: The Security Operations Centre (SOC) utilises a SIEM platform to watch live network traffic for malware signatures 24/7.
Control Risk: The probability that a material error exists and will not be prevented or detected on a timely basis by the organisation's existing internal controls. Example: A high control risk exists if an organisation relies entirely on an annual manual review of firewall rule changes rather than on automated daily configuration alerts.
Corrective Control: A reactive mechanism designed to remediate errors, omissions, unauthorised uses, and malicious intrusions only after they have been detected. Example: The automated execution of a disaster-recovery failover to a secondary data centre immediately after the primary data centre experiences a catastrophic power failure.
Criteria: The objective, complete, reliable, and measurable benchmarks against which an auditor evaluates the specific subject matter. Example: Utilising the heavily documented ISO 27001 standard as the authoritative benchmark to evaluate an organisation's Information Security Management System.
Detection Risk: The probability that the IS auditor's applied substantive testing procedures will completely fail to identify a material error or misstatement. Example: An auditor failing to uncover a massive database corruption issue because they arbitrarily chose a sample size of only 5 records out of 5 million.
Detective Control: A monitoring mechanism that provides warnings of violations or attempted violations of security policies without inherently inhibiting the action. Example: A network Intrusion Detection System (IDS) that sends an email alert to administrators indicating a brute-force password attack is currently underway against a server.
Deterrent Control: A psychological or physical mechanism providing warnings intended to dissuade intentional or unintentional attempts to compromise a system. Example: A prominently displayed login banner on a corporate workstation stating that unauthorised access is monitored and constitutes a federal crime.
Discovery Sampling: A highly specialised sampling approach designed mathematically to uncover at least one single instance of an anomaly, deviation, or fraud. Example: An auditor reviewing executive expense reports explicitly searching for a singular instance of an executive expensing an unauthorised personal vacation.
Due Professional Care: The ethical standard requiring auditors to act with diligence, integrity, professional scepticism, and the skill expected of a reasonably prudent professional. Example: An auditor refusing to accept a department head's verbal assurance that backups are successful, demanding to see the hard cryptographic hashes as proof.
Familiarity Threat: A threat to objectivity that occurs when an auditor becomes overly sympathetic to the auditee's interests due to a long, close relationship, leading to undue acceptance of the auditee's work. Example: An auditor failing to rigorously test the network access controls because the network administrator is a former colleague and a close personal friend.
Inherent Risk: The baseline risk level or exposure of a process or entity to material error, assuming absolutely no internal controls have been implemented. Example: The naturally massive risk of data theft associated with allowing employees to download highly classified corporate intellectual property onto unencrypted personal USB drives.
Inspection: An evidence-gathering technique involving the meticulous physical or electronic examination of internal or external documents, records, and assets. Example: An auditor physically reviewing the maintenance logs signed by technicians attached to the Uninterruptible Power Supply (UPS) units in the data centre.
Integrated Auditing: A holistic audit approach that evaluates both the IT systems and the supporting business processes simultaneously to generate a combined opinion on control risk. Example: Auditing the automated tax calculation logic within an ERP system while simultaneously auditing the human accounting department's manual tax filing procedures.
Integrated Test Facility (ITF): A continuous auditing CAAT where fictitious entities are created within a production system to process test transactions alongside live data, verifying application logic safely. Example: Creating a "dummy" employee in the live payroll system and running a test paycheck to verify that the system correctly calculates federal tax withholdings.
Intimidation Threat: A threat to objectivity occurring when an auditor is deterred from acting with integrity because of actual or perceived pressures, including attempts to exercise undue influence. Example: A Chief Financial Officer threatening to drastically cut the internal audit department's budget if the upcoming IS audit report contains negative findings.
Management Participation Threat: A severe threat to independence resulting from auditors taking on the role of management, or performing operational functions on behalf of the audited entity. Example: An auditor personally configuring the rule sets on the corporate firewall to help the IT department meet a tight deadline.
Objectivity: The required mental state allowing an auditor to perform engagements impartially, free from bias, self-interest, or any undue internal or external influence. Example: An auditor documenting critical security failures in a system managed by their direct supervisor, without altering the findings to protect the supervisor's reputation.
Organisational Independence: The structural placement of the audit function within an enterprise, ensuring it is completely free from operational management's interference or conflicts of interest. Example: Structuring the organisational chart so that the Chief Audit Executive reports directly to the Board of Directors, rather than to the Chief Information Officer.
Pervasive IT Controls: High-level, overarching general controls that focus on the comprehensive management, governance, and monitoring of the entire IT environment. Example: The enterprise-wide IT strategic plan, the corporate security policy framework, and the overarching risk management methodology.
Preventive Control: A proactive mechanism designed structurally to inhibit or impede attempts to violate established security policies and practices. Example: Implementing full-disk encryption and strict physical vault doors to mathematically and physically guarantee that stolen hardware cannot be accessed.
Re-performance: An evidence-gathering technique where the auditor independently executes procedures or controls that were originally executed by the information system or personnel. Example: An auditor takes a sample of raw transaction data and runs it through their own independent calculation script to see if their output matches the system's output.
Risk Assessment: The formalised process of identifying, quantifying, and prioritising risks against enterprise objectives to guide the effective allocation of audit resources. Example: Rating a legacy operating system vulnerability as "High Risk" because its exploitation would cause an enterprise-wide outage, taking more than six months to recover from.
Sampling Risk: The mathematical danger that the auditor's conclusion drawn from a limited sample diverges fundamentally from the conclusion that would be reached if the entire population were tested. Example: The auditor tests 10 servers and finds them perfectly patched, concluding the whole network is safe, when in reality the remaining 990 servers are entirely unpatched.
Self-Interest Threat: A threat to objectivity occurring when a financial or other personal interest inappropriately influences the auditor's professional judgment or behaviour. Example: An auditor suppressing negative findings regarding an application because they personally own significant stock in the third-party vendor that developed the application.
Self-Review Threat: A threat to objectivity occurring when an auditor must evaluate the results of previous judgments made or services performed by themselves. Example: An auditor being assigned to independently review the effectiveness of the disaster recovery plan that they authored and implemented six months prior.
Stop-or-Go Sampling: A flexible sampling methodology that helps prevent excessive testing by allowing the auditor to halt the test at the earliest moment if few errors are encountered. Example: An auditor begins testing firewall rules; after finding absolutely zero errors in the first 25 samples, they cease testing, inferring a highly effective control environment.
Stratified Mean per Unit: A specific variable sampling technique where a population is divided into homogenous subgroups (strata) based on characteristics to reduce variance and improve estimation accuracy. Example: Grouping an inventory database into high-value servers, medium-value laptops, and low-value peripherals before taking statistical samples from each distinct group.
Substantive Testing: A rigorous audit procedure designed to bypass the control environment to gather evidence evaluating the ultimate integrity, completeness, and accuracy of individual data points. Example: Manually recalculating the accrued interest on 5,000 separate bank accounts to verify that the banking software's mathematical logic executed flawlessly over the year.
Variable Sampling: A quantitative statistical model utilised predominantly in substantive testing to estimate the continuous value, weight, or monetary magnitude of a vast population. Example: Selecting a statistical sample of IT hardware acquisition invoices to accurately estimate the total monetary misstatement of IT capital expenditures for the entire fiscal year.