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Abstract:
The Internet is uniquely and strategically positioned to address the needs
of a growing segment of population in a very cost-effective way. It provides
tremendous connectivity and immense information sharing capability which the
organizations can use for their competitive advantage. Several organizations
have transited from their old and disparate business models based on ink and
paper to a new, consolidated ones based on digital information on the Internet.
However, information sharing on the Internet usually occurs in broad, highly
dy na mic network-based environments, and formally accessing the resources
in a secure manner poses a difficult challenge. Balancing the competing goals
of collaboration and security is difficult because interaction in collaborative
systems is targeted towards making people, information, and resources available
to all who need it, whereas information security seeks to ensure the integrity
of these elements while providing it only to those with proper authorization.
As organizations implement information strategies that call for sharing access
to resources in the networked environment, mechanisms must be provided to protect
the resources from adversaries.
This talk addresses the issue of how to advocate selective
information sharing in collaborative systems through
access control schemes while minimizing the risks of
u na uthorized access proposing a delegation framework.
It also introduces a systematic approach to specify delegation
and revocation policies using a set of rules. The feasibility
of the proposed framework is also discussed through policy
specification, enforcement, and a proof-of-concept implementation.
Biography: Gail-Joon Ahn is an assistant
professor of Software and Information Systems Department
at University of North Caroli na at Charlotte and a coordi
na tor of Laboratory of Information Integration, Security
and Privacy which has been desig na ted as a Center of
Academic Excellence in Information Assurance Education
by Natio na l Security Agency. His principal research
and teaching interests are in information and systems
security. Ahn received PhD and MS degrees from George
Mason University , Fairfax , Virginia , and BS degree
in Computer Science from SoongSil University , Seoul
, Korea . His research foci include access control, security
architecture for distributed objects, and secure e-commerce
systems and his research has been supported by NSF, NSA,
DoD, DoE, Bank of America, Hewlett Packard, Microsoft
and Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. Ahn is currently
an information director of ACM Special Interest Group
on Security, Audit and Control (SIGSAC) and he is a recipient
of Department of Energy Early Career Principal Investigator
Award.
For more Information
on LERSAIS Information Assurance seminar please visit : http://www.sis.pitt.edu/~lersais/
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