| J. P. Anderson. Computer security technology planning study. Technical Report ESD-TR-73-51, Electronic System Division/AFSC, Bedford, MA, October 1972. |
....transformed to use wrappers instead of the original library code. However, in order for Naccio to support extensible security policies, it must recompile policy definitions, recreate library wrappers and re modify programs to use the new wrappers. As an alternative mechanism, a resource monitor [2] intercepts and validates resource accesses. Our approach uses an extensible resource manager which is essentially created and modified at runtime. Most approaches, however, use a static resource monitor. While a user can change what a static resource monitor does denying access or not ....
J.P. Anderson, Computer security technology planning study, Technical Report ESD-TR-73-51, Vol. II, Electronic Systems Division, Air Force Systems Command, Hanscom AFB, Bedford, MA 01731, October 1972, [NTIS AD-758 206].
.... Privilege and More 1 Fred B. Schneider Department of Computer Science Cornell University Ithaca, New York 14853 Introduction Operating system access control mechanisms are intended to protect programs and data from corruption, yet still allow sharing of these resources. The goal is to support a broad range of ....
....Privilege and More 1 Fred B. Schneider Department of Computer Science Cornell University Ithaca, New York 14853 Introduction Operating system access control mechanisms are intended to protect programs and data from corruption, yet still allow sharing of these resources. The goal is to support a broad range of authorization policies. But at least in commercial operating systems of the last few ....
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J. Anderson. Computer security technology planning study. Technical Report ESD-TR-7351, Electronic Systems Divison, Hanscom Air Force Base, Hanscom, MA, 1974.
.... of information assurance (IA) as follows: 1 First generation IA technologies sought to provide protection, i.e. preventing an attacker from getting through a boundary estab 4 Figure 1 Information Assurance Technology Generations lished to insulate applications from malicious behavior [1, 29, 27]. Despite significant e#ort and progress in mechanisms for protection, however, intrusions still occur. 2 Second generation IA technologies focused on intrusion detection, attempting to identify successful intrusions and alert system administrators to remedy the situation [9, 15, 10] Evaluations ....
James P. Anderson. Computer security technology planning study. Technical Report ESD-TR-73-51, vols I and II, AD-758 206, USAF Electronic Systems Division, October 1972.
....only way to ensure conformance with a policy that does not satisfy conditions (a) or (b) above, is to enforce it. If the community subject to this policy is small enough, then such enforcement can be carried out by employing a trusted third party (TTP) to function as a kind of reference monitor [1], which mediates all the interactions subject to it. This has been done by several projects [11, 4, 14] mostly in the context of distributed enterprise systems. But if the community is large, as is often the case over the internet, then the use of a single reference monitor is inherently ....
J.P. Anderson. Computer security technology planning study. Technical Report TR-73-51, Air Force Electronic System Division., 1972.
....an IRM implementation for a new way to support Java 2 s stack inspection policy is given in Section 5. Finally, Section 6 concludes with some remarks about the IRM approach and about limitations we discovered in Java s stack inspection policy. 2 Inlined Reference Monitors For a reference monitor [2] to enforce a security policy, i) it must mediate all events relevant to the policy being enforced, ii) its integrity must be protected from subversion by applications, and (iii) its presence must be transparent to applications [14] Address space isolation has traditionally been employed for ....
Anderson, J.P. Computer security technology planning study. Technical Report ESD-TR-73-51, U.S. Air Force Electronic Systems Division, Deputy for Command and Management Systems, HQ Electronic Systems Division (AFSC), Bedford, Massachusetts, October 1972, volume 2, 58--69.
....of a unified description and enforcement of policies. Our design of PM is related to the traditional reference monitor approach. A reference monitor is not necessarily a single piece of code that controls all accesses; rather, it is an abstraction or model of the collection of access controls [Ande72] As we have applied the concept, PM does not dictate requirements for particular types of subject or object attributes nor the relationships of these attributes within its abstract database. Because of this generality PM can be used to model the implementation of a wide variety of access ....
Anderson J. P., "Computer Security Technology Planning Study," ESD_TR_73-51, Vol. 1, Hanscom AFB, Mass., 1972.
....IRM implementation for a new way to support Java 2 s stack inspection policy is given in Section 5. Finally, Section 6 concludes with some remarks about the IRM approach and about limitations we discovered in Java s stack inspection policy. 2. Inlined Reference Monitors For a reference monitor [2] to enforce a security policy, i) it must mediate all events relevant to the policy being enforced, ii) its integrity must be protected from subversion by applications, and (iii) its presence must be transparent to applications [15] Address space isolation has traditionally been employed for ....
Anderson, J.P. Computer security technology planning study. Technical Report ESD-TR-73-51, U.S. Air Force Electronic Systems Division, Deputy for Command and Management Systems, HQ Electronic Systems Division (AFSC), Bedford, Massachusetts, October 1972, volume 2, 58--69.
....the Linux kernel. 1 Introduction The critical role of operating system protection mechanisms in providing system security has been wellunderstood for over thirty years, yet the access control mechanisms of existing mainstream operating systems are still inadequate to provide strong security [2, 39, 28, 17, 26, 6, 30]. Although many enhanced access control models and frameworks have been proposed and implemented [9, 1, 4, 41, 23, 10, 29, 37] mainstream operating systems typically still lack support for these enhancements. In part, the absence of such enhancements is due to a lack of agreement within the ....
J. Anderson. Computer Security Technology Planning Study. Report Technical Report ESD-TR-73-51, Air Force Elect. Systems Div., October 1972.
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J Anderson, `Computer Security Technology Planning Study', ESD-TR-73-51, US Air Force Electronic Systems Division (1973) http://csrc.nist.gov/publications/ history/index.html
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J. P. Anderson. Computer security technology planning study. Technical Report ESD-TR-73-51, Electronic System Division/AFSC, Bedford, MA, October 1972.
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Anderson, J.P. (1972). Computer Security Technology Planning Study. ESD-TR-73-51, Air Force Electronic Systems Division, Hanscom AFB, Bedford, MA.
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Anderson, J.P. (1972). Computer Security Technology Planning Study. ESD-TR-73-51, Air Force Electronic Systems Division, Hanscom AFB, Bedford, MA.
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J. Anderson. Computer security technology planning study. Technical Report ESD-TR-73-51, AFSC, Hanscom AFB, Bedford, MA, October 1972. AD-758 206, ESD/AFSC.
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J. P. Anderson. Computer Security Technology Planning Study. Technical Report ESD-TR-73-51, USAF Electronic Systems Division, Hanscom Air Force Base, Bedford, Massachusetts, October 1972.
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J.P. Anderson. Computer security technology planning study. Technical Report ESDTR -73-51-2, U.S. Air Force Electronic Systems Division, Bedford, Massachusetts, October 1972.
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J.P. Anderson. Computer security technology planning study. Technical Report ESDTR -73-51-1, U.S. Air Force Electronic Systems Division, Bedford, Massachusetts, October 1972.
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James P. Anderson. Computer security technology planning study. Technical Report ESD-TR-73-51, U.S. Air Force, Electronic Systems Division, Deputy for Command and Management Systems, HQ Electronic Systems Division (AFSC), L. G. Hanscom Field, Bedford, Massachusetts 01730 USA, October 1972. Volume 2, pages 58--69. 152
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J. P. Anderson. Computer Security Technology Planning Study. Technical Report ESD-TR-73-51, USAF Electronic Systems Division, Hanscom Air Force Base, Bedford, Massachusetts, October 1972.
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Anderson JP. Computer Security Technology Planning Study. ESD-TR-73-51, Air Force Electronic Systems Division, Hanscom AFB, Bedford, MA, 1972. (Also available as Vol. I,DITCAD-758206. Vol. II, DITCAD-772806)
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Anderson, J. (1972). Computer Security Technology Planning Study. Technical Report ESD-TR-73-51, Vols. I and II, Air Force Electronic Systems Division.
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J.P. Anderson. Computer Security Technology Planning Study. Technical Report ESDTR -73-51, Air Force Electronic Systems Division, Hanscom AFB, Bedford, MA, 1972. (Also available as Vol. I, DITCAD-758206. Vol. II, DITCAD-772806).
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Anderson, JP. (1972). Computer Security Technology Planning Study. ESD-TR-73-51, Air Force Electronic Systems Division, Hanscom AFB, Bedford, MA. (Also available as Vol. I,DITCAD758206. Vol. II, DITCAD-772806)
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Anderson, J.: Computer security technology planning study. Technical Report TR-73-51, Air Force Electronic System Division. (1972)
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J. P. Anderson. Computer Security Technology Planning Study. Technical Report ESD-TR-73-51, vols. I and II, AD-758 206, USAF Electronic Systems Division, October 1972.
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J.P. Anderson, Computer security technology planning study, Technical Report ESD-TR-73-51, Vol. II, Electronic Systems Division, Air Force Systems Command, Hanscom AFB, Bedford, MA 01731, October 1972, [NTIS AD-758 206].
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