Results 251 to 260 of about 216,406 (305)
Challenges to food security in a changing environment: a community-based participatory research study in Casamance, Senegal (West Africa). [PDF]
Barclay-Derman N +15 more
europepmc +1 more source
Research on the Decoupling of Agricultural Planting Carbon Intensity and Food Security in Hunan Province, China. [PDF]
Xing Y, Liu X, Xiao H, Dou C.
europepmc +1 more source
Wrinkled Photonic Elastomers with Dynamic Structural Color Patterns for Multilevel Optical Anti-Counterfeiting. [PDF]
Jiang X +8 more
europepmc +1 more source
Measuring the Level of Security Introduced by Security Patterns
It is possible to reasonably measure the security quality of individual security patterns. However, more interesting is to ask: Can we show that a system built using security patterns is secure in some sense? We discuss here some issues about evaluating the security of a system built using security patterns.
Nobukazu Yoshioka, Hironori Washizaki
exaly +4 more sources
Addressing the challenges of developing secure software systems remains an active research area in software engineering. Current research efforts have resulted in the documentation of recurring security problems as security patterns. Security patterns provide encapsulated solutions to specific security problems and can be used to build secure systems ...
Armstrong Nhlabatsi +13 more
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Usability and Security Patterns
2009 Second International Conferences on Advances in Computer-Human Interactions, 2009Some authors argue that it can be complicated to build systems with both usability and security, but the reality is that there is no real conflict between these two properties. Certainly, it takes more work to build systems that have the properties of usability and security, but in many cases it is a matter of doing just a good job not miracles.
Andrei Ferreira +2 more
openaire +1 more source
Proceedings of the 45th annual southeast regional conference, 2007
One of the latest ways to improve software security is based on the use of security patterns. Security patterns provide encapsulated solutions to specific security problems and can be used to build secure systems by designers with little knowledge of security. We present here a way to use security patterns to add security to applications.
Eduardo B. Fernández, Xiaohong Yuan
openaire +1 more source
One of the latest ways to improve software security is based on the use of security patterns. Security patterns provide encapsulated solutions to specific security problems and can be used to build secure systems by designers with little knowledge of security. We present here a way to use security patterns to add security to applications.
Eduardo B. Fernández, Xiaohong Yuan
openaire +1 more source
IEEE Software, 2007
Early software systems communicated in predefined ways, so they were easy to secure. However, the old ways of ensuring software systems' security and reliability are inadequate on the Internet. Although building secure systems is difficult, retrofitting existing systems to introduce security is even harder.
Munawar Hafiz +2 more
openaire +1 more source
Early software systems communicated in predefined ways, so they were easy to secure. However, the old ways of ensuring software systems' security and reliability are inadequate on the Internet. Although building secure systems is difficult, retrofitting existing systems to introduce security is even harder.
Munawar Hafiz +2 more
openaire +1 more source
An Ontology for Security Patterns
2019 38th International Conference of the Chilean Computer Science Society (SCCC), 2019Security is a fundamental requirement that we must keep in mind when developing a system. We approach the secure construction of software through the use of security patterns, as a way to mitigate their threats. We propose an ontological approach to security patterns, with the aim of adding semantics to the elements that surround security patterns.
Anelis Pereira Vale +1 more
openaire +1 more source
Security Pattern Lattice: A Formal Model to Organize Security Patterns
2008 19th International Conference on Database and Expert Systems Applications, 2008Except for some work in classifying security patterns (SP) based on taxonomy and linguistic metaphors not much has been done in organizing SP. No suitable formal model for organization of security patterns is yet available. In this paper, exploiting results from formal concept analysis (FCA) a formal model to organize SP is introduced.
Achyanta Sarmah +2 more
openaire +1 more source

