• DocumentCode
    2552400
  • Title

    Adaptive trust negotiation and access control for grids

  • Author

    Ryutov, Tatyana ; Zhou, Li ; Neuman, Clifford ; Foukia, Noria ; Leithead, Travis ; Seamons, Kent E.

  • Author_Institution
    Inf. Sci. Inst., Southern California Univ., Marina del Rey, CA, USA
  • fYear
    2005
  • fDate
    13-14 Nov. 2005
  • Abstract
    Access control in computational grids is typically provided by a combination of identity certificates and local accounts. This approach does not scale as the number of users and resources increase. Moreover, identity-based access control is not sufficient because users and resources may reside in different security domains and may not have pre-existing knowledge about one another. Trust negotiation is well-suited for grid computing because it allows participants to establish mutual trust based on attributes other than identity. The adaptive trust negotiation and access control (ATNAC) framework addresses the problem of access control in open systems by protecting itself from adversaries who may want to misuse, exhaust or deny service to resources. ATNAC is based on the GAA-API, which provides adaptive access control capturing dynamically changing system security requirements. The GAA-API utilizes TrustBuilder to establish a sufficient level of trust between the negotiating participants, based on the sensitivity of the access request and a suspicion level associated with the requester. A federated security context allows Grid participants to communicate their security appraisal and make judgments based on collective wisdom and the level of trust among them. We plan to apply ATNAC techniques to negotiation agreements in virtual organizations and P2P environments.
  • Keywords
    application program interfaces; authorisation; certification; grid computing; open systems; peer-to-peer computing; GAA-API; P2P environments; access control; access request; adaptive trust negotiation; federated security; grid computing; identity certificates; mutual trust; open systems; service denial; service exhaustion; service misuse; suspicion level; system security requirements; virtual organizations; Access control; Adaptive control; Appraisal; Context; Grid computing; Information security; Internet; Open systems; Programmable control; Protection;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Grid Computing, 2005. The 6th IEEE/ACM International Workshop on
  • Print_ISBN
    0-7803-9492-5
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/GRID.2005.1542724
  • Filename
    1542724