| J.M. Seigneur et al., End-to-end Trust Starts with Recognition, tech. report TCD-CS-2003-05, Computer Science Dept., Trinity College Dublin, 2003. |
....identity of the entity with whom the interaction occurs. However, we believe that it is sometimes sufficient to determine whether an entity has behaved correctly or not in a previous collaboration rather than to get a precise identity without information about the likely behavior of the entity. [9] Recollection of similar interactions involves searching for data in similar contexts, including entity properties, situations, similar observations of the entity, reputations, any recommendations from a third party and so on. Risk assessment based on the evidence provided by the recollection ....
J.-M. Seigneur, S. Farrell, C. D. Jensen, E. Gray, and Y. Chen, "End-to-end Trust Starts with Recognition", Proceedings of the First International Conference on Security in Pervasive Computing, 2003
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J.-M. Seigneur, S. Farrell, C. D. Jensen, E. Gray, and Y. Chen, "End-to-end Trust Starts with Recognition", in Proceedings of the Conference on Security in Pervasive Computing, LNCS 2802, Springer, 2003.
....of previously observed encountered entities. Usually, authentication is the first step to ensure security in computing environments but other work [11] discusses why traditional authentication should be revised for pervasive computing. The entity recognition process and end to end trust model [12] address this problem by recognition, which is a more general concept than authentication, i.e. entity recognition encompasses authentication. We believe that the ability to recognise an entity is sufficient to establish the trustworthiness of that entity, i.e. recognition establishes a reference ....
....3. SECURE applied to smart devices Commonly, smart home middleware provides discovery services because it simplifies the installation of new smart appliances. These discovery schemes can be seen as recognition schemes which could be plugged into the SECURE Pluggable Recognition Module (PRM) [12], currently under implementation based on Java PAM [13, 14] Most of these discovery schemes cannot be considered as strong recognition schemes. However, we can still use them in our recognition process since the PRM provides meta data on the technical trust in the recognition scheme used. ....
[Article contains additional citation context not shown here]
J.-M. Seigneur, S. Farrell, C. D. Jensen, E. Gray, and Y. Chen, "End-to-end Trust Starts with Recognition", in Proceedings of the First International Conference on Security in Pervasive Computing, 2003.
No context found.
J.M. Seigneur et al., End-to-end Trust Starts with Recognition, tech. report TCD-CS-2003-05, Computer Science Dept., Trinity College Dublin, 2003.
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