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J. Vitek and C. Tschudin. Mobile Objects Systems. Springer Verlag, Berlin, 1997.

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Police Agents for Enforcing Internet Security - Bryce (1999)   (Correct)

....architecture. 3.1 The agent model: places, agents and messages The Internet application executes over a set of inter connected sites or places. An agent is an autonomous program that accesses resources locally at a place; when it needs to use resources at another place, it migrates to that place [27]. Some agents at a place are system agents: these do not move and typically offer services such as storage, GUI, etc. 17] A says m to B A moves to P as B A Requests C from P new A a start Terminate A The set of actions that an agent can execute are listed in this table. At each place, ....

J. Vitek and C. Tschudin. Mobile Objects Systems. Springer Verlag, Berlin, 1997.


A Security Framework for a Mobile Agent System - Bryce (2000)   (Correct)

....infrastructure is that mobile agents are themselves used to enforce the security properties. 1 Introduction Mobile agents offer a promising approach to Internet programming. An agent is a program that executes on a host, that can be stopped and then have its execution continued on another host [25]. The advantage of mobile agents is twofold. First, they enable computation to be moved closer to where the resources that they require reside on the network; studies confirm that this can save network bandwidth for applications [21] Second, they enable application functionality to be dynamically ....

....the security properties of the agent infrastructure. Finally, Section 2.4 explains why agents themselves are used as a basic mechanism for security enforcement. 2. 1 The mobile agent paradigm A mobile agent is a program or object that can be moved between network hosts during its execution [25]. The first benefit of agents is that computation can be moved closer to where the data it needs resides, and this can often save expensive network bandwidth [21] A second benefit is that it enables application programs to be dynamically deployed to hosts on which one had not foreseen to run ....

J. Vitek and C. Tschudin. Mobile Objects Systems. Springer Verlag, Berlin, 1997.


TuCSoN: a Coordination Model for Mobile Information Agents - Omicini, Zambonelli (1998)   (14 citations)  (Correct)

....out r(keyword(RKW,Page) reaction(out r(relPages(KW,RKW, in r(kwURLs(KW, Figure 3. 3 4 Related Works In the last few years, several systems and programming environments have been proposed to support the development of Internet applications based on mobile agents [RPZ97, VT97] Despite this fermenting activity, only a few proposals focus on coordination issues. Most of the proposed systems rely on message passing for inter agent coordination and on the client server model for the accesses to the local information systems. Typical examples are Java based mobile agents ....

J. Vitek and C. Tschudin, editors. Mobile Object Systems, number 1222 in LNCS. Springer-Verlag, April 1997.


Object Passing and Interaction Mechanism of the.. - Kato, Matsubara.. (1997)   (Correct)

No context found.

J. Vitek and C. Tschudin, editors, Mobile Object Systems, LNCS-1222, pages 201#211. Springer-Verlag, 1997.

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