DocumentCode :
1319659
Title :
Mathematics, technology, and trust: formal verification, computer security, and the U.S. military
Author :
Mackenzie, Donald ; Pottinger, Garrel
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Sociology, Edinburgh Univ., UK
Volume :
19
Issue :
3
fYear :
1997
Firstpage :
41
Lastpage :
59
Abstract :
A distinctive concern in the US military for computer security dates from the emergence of time-sharing systems in the 1960s. This paper traces the subsequent development of the idea of a “security kernel” and of the mathematical modeling of security, focusing in particular on the paradigmatic Bell-LaPadula model. The paper examines the connections between computer security and formal, deductive verification of the properties of computer systems. It goes on to discuss differences between the cultures of communications security and computer security, the bureaucratic turf war over security, and the emergence and impact of the Department of Defense´s Trusted Computer System Evaluation Criteria (the so-called Orange Book), which effectively took its final form in 1983. The paper ends by outlining the fragmentation of computer security since the Orange Book was written
Keywords :
formal verification; history; military computing; security of data; time-sharing systems; Bell-LaPadula model; Orange Book; Trusted Computer System Evaluation Criteria; US Department of Defense; US military; bureaucracy; communications security; computer security; computer system properties; cultures; deductive verification; formal verification; mathematical modeling; security kernel; technology; time-sharing systems; Communication system security; Computer science; Computer security; Cryptography; Formal verification; History; Mathematical model; Mathematics; Military computing; National security;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Annals of the History of Computing, IEEE
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
1058-6180
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/85.601735
Filename :
601735
Link To Document :
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