@conference {60, title = {Distributed Middleware Enforcement of Event Flow Security Policy}, booktitle = {ACM/IFIP/USENIX 11th International Middleware Conference (Middleware)}, year = {2010}, month = {11/2010}, publisher = {Springer}, organization = {Springer}, address = {Bangalore, India}, abstract = {

Distributed, event-driven applications that process sensitive user data and involve multiple organisational domains must comply with complex security requirements. Ideally, developers want to express security policy for such applications in data-centric terms, controlling the flow of information throughout the system. Current middleware does not support the specification of such end-to-end security policy and lacks uniform mechanisms for enforcement.

We describe DEFCon-Policy, a middleware that enforces security policy in multi-domain, event-driven applications. Event flow policy is expressed in a high-level language that specifies permitted flows between distributed software components. The middleware limits the interaction of components based on the policy and the data that components have observed. It achieves this by labelling data and assigning privileges to components. We evaluate DEFCon-Policy in a realistic medical scenario and demonstrate that it can provide global security guarantees without burdening application developers.

}, keywords = {smartflow}, url = {http://lsds.doc.ic.ac.uk/research/doc/mw10-event_flow.pdf}, author = {Matteo Migliavacca and Ioannis Papagiannis and David M. Eyers and Brian Shand and Jean Bacon and Peter Pietzuch} }