| A. Baraani, J. Pieprzyk, and R. Safavi-Naini. Security In Databases: A Survey Study, 1996. |
....the theft of intellectual property due to database vulnerability costs American businesses 103 billion annually and 45 of the attacks are conducted by insiders. Traditional database security policies rely on user authentication, communication encryption and serverenforced access controls [BPS96]. Unfortunately, these mechanisms are inoperative against most insider attacks and particularly against database administrator attacks. Several attempts have been made recently to strengthen server based database security policies thanks to database encryption [Ora99, Mat00, HeW01] This paper ....
....to spy on the DBMS behavior. An Intruder who usurps successfully the identity of an Insider or an Administrator will be considered as such in the rest of the paper. 2.3. Weaknesses of server based security policies Traditional database security policies rely on three well established principles [BPS96]: 1) user identification and authentication, that can be supported by mechanisms ranging from simple login password methods up to smartcard or biometrics device based methods; 2) network encryption, that guarantees the confidentiality and the integrity of client server communications; and (3) ....
A. Baraani, J. Pieprzyk, R. Safavi-Naini "Security In Databases: A Survey Study", 1996. citeseer.nj.nec.com/baraani-dastjerdi96security.html
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A. Baraani, J. Pieprzyk, and R. Safavi-Naini. Security In Databases: A Survey Study, 1996.
No context found.
Baraani A., Pieprzyk J., Safavi-Naini R. "Security In Databases: A Survey Study", 1996.
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