68,736 research outputs found

    Information Flow Analysis Based Security Checking of Health Service Composition Plans

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    In this paper, we present an approach to solve the problem of provably secure execution of semantic web service composition plans. The integrated components of this approach include our OWL-S service matchmaker, OWLSMX, the service composition planner, OWLS-XPlan, and the security checker module for formally verifying the compliance of the created composition plan to be executed with given data and service security policies using type-based information flow analysis. We demonstrate this approach by means of its application to a use case scenario of health service composition planning

    The Anatomy and Facets of Dynamic Policies

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    Information flow policies are often dynamic; the security concerns of a program will typically change during execution to reflect security-relevant events. A key challenge is how to best specify, and give proper meaning to, such dynamic policies. A large number of approaches exist that tackle that challenge, each yielding some important, but unconnected, insight. In this work we synthesise existing knowledge on dynamic policies, with an aim to establish a common terminology, best practices, and frameworks for reasoning about them. We introduce the concept of facets to illuminate subtleties in the semantics of policies, and closely examine the anatomy of policies and the expressiveness of policy specification mechanisms. We further explore the relation between dynamic policies and the concept of declassification.Comment: Technical Report of publication under the same name in Computer Security Foundations (CSF) 201

    Statically checking confidentiality via dynamic labels

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    This paper presents a new approach for verifying confidentiality for programs, based on abstract interpretation. The framework is formally developed and proved correct in the theorem prover PVS. We use dynamic labeling functions to abstractly interpret a simple programming language via modification of security levels of variables. Our approach is sound and compositional and results in an algorithm for statically checking confidentiality

    Towards a metric for recognition-based graphical password security

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    Recognition-based graphical password (RBGP) schemes are not easily compared in terms of security. Current research uses many different measures which results in confusion as to whether RBGP schemes are secure against guessing and capture attacks. If it were possible to measure all RBGP schemes in a common way it would provide an easy comparison between them, allowing selection of the most secure design. This paper presents a discussion of potential attacks against recognition-based graphical password (RBGP) authentication schemes. As a result of this examination a preliminary measure of the security of a recognition-based scheme is presented. The security measure is a 4-tuple based on distractor selection, shoulder surfing, intersection and replay attacks. It is aimed to be an initial proposal and is designed in a way which is extensible and adjustable as further research in the area develops. Finally, an example is provided by application to the PassFaces scheme

    Secure data sharing and processing in heterogeneous clouds

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    The extensive cloud adoption among the European Public Sector Players empowered them to own and operate a range of cloud infrastructures. These deployments vary both in the size and capabilities, as well as in the range of employed technologies and processes. The public sector, however, lacks the necessary technology to enable effective, interoperable and secure integration of a multitude of its computing clouds and services. In this work we focus on the federation of private clouds and the approaches that enable secure data sharing and processing among the collaborating infrastructures and services of public entities. We investigate the aspects of access control, data and security policy languages, as well as cryptographic approaches that enable fine-grained security and data processing in semi-trusted environments. We identify the main challenges and frame the future work that serve as an enabler of interoperability among heterogeneous infrastructures and services. Our goal is to enable both security and legal conformance as well as to facilitate transparency, privacy and effectivity of private cloud federations for the public sector needs. © 2015 The Authors
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