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Security in a secure capability-based system

ACM SIGOPS Operating Systems Review, 1989
Capability-based systems such as KeyKOS support mandatory and discretionary security policies without identifying the source of every request. Some misconceptions about such systems are clarified.
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Securing SCADA systems

Information Management & Computer Security, 2008
PurposeSupervisory control and data acquisition (SCADA) systems are widely used by utility companies during the production and distribution of oil, gas, chemicals, electric power, and water to control and monitor these operations. A cyber attack on a SCADA system cannot only result in a major financial disaster but also in devastating damage to public ...
Sandip C. Patel, Pritimoy Sanyal
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Systemic Security Management

IEEE Security and Privacy Magazine, 2006
The University of Southern California's Institute for Critical Information Infrastructure Protection (ICIIP) developed a conceptual framework for enterprise security. ICIIP (which shouldn't be confused with the Institute for Information Infrastructure Protection, or I3P) sought to close the gap between the current corporate cybersecurity risk profile ...
Laree Kiely, Terry V. Benzel
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System security, platform security and usability

Proceedings of the fifth ACM workshop on Scalable trusted computing, 2010
Scalable trusted computing seeks to apply and extend the fundamental technologies of trusted computing to large-scale systems. To provide the functionality demanded by users, bootstrapping a trusted platform is but the first of many steps in a complex, evolving mesh of components.
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Security for extensible systems

Proceedings. The Sixth Workshop on Hot Topics in Operating Systems (Cat. No.97TB100133), 2002
The recent trend towards dynamically extensible systems, such as Java, SPIN or VINO, promises more powerful and flexible systems. At the same time, the impact of extensibility on overall system security and, specifically, on access control is still ill understood, and protection mechanisms in these extensible systems are rudimentary at best.
Robert Grimm 0001, Brian N. Bershad
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Securing Shared Systems

2016
With increasing reliance on new and interactive technologies, a challenge producers face is the requirement of a secure system to control users of their cooperative designs or applications to reap economic benefit. An authentication code is the series of letters and numbers, often disclosed after purchasing a product or service and that allows access ...
Mandy Li, Willy Susilo, Joseph Tonien
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On the Security of the UMTS System

2001
This contribution presents an overview of the security of the 3rd generation mobile radio system UMTS as currently standardised by the 3rd Generation Partnership Project 3GPP. We discuss the underlying principles and show to which extent the security of 2nd generation systems as GSM is improved and enhanced by UMTS.
Stefan Pütz   +2 more
openaire   +1 more source

Security in Autonomous Systems

2019 IEEE European Test Symposium (ETS), 2019
Autonomous systems promise solutions to a wide range of technical and societal problems, and their use appears especially attractive in safety-critical domains, like transportation or factory automation. This paper focuses on an underestimated aspect of autonomous systems: their security implications.
Stefan Katzenbeisser 0001   +3 more
openaire   +1 more source

Networking of secure systems

IEEE Journal on Selected Areas in Communications, 1989
The design and implementation aspects of network security facilities for interconnecting Unix-based secure systems such as Secure Xenix, and CMW, using the TCP/IP protocols for communication, are described. Session-based and non-session-based security facilities are proposed for achieving secure connectivity between secure systems.
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Pretending that Systems Are Secure

IEEE Security and Privacy Magazine, 2005
To a large extent, computing systems are useful only to the degree in which they're embedded in the processes that constitute human society. This embedding makes effective system security extremely important, but achieving it requires a strong look at the human side of the picture - the computers themselves are only part of the system.
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