Title :
Policies in accountable contracts
Author :
Shand, Brian ; Bacon, Jean
Author_Institution :
Comput. Lab., Cambridge Univ., UK
Abstract :
In this paper, accounting policies explicitly control resource usage within a contract architecture. Combined with a virtual resource economy, this allows efficient exchange of high-level computer services between untrustworthy participants. These services are specified as contracts, which must be signed by the participants to take effect. Each contract expresses its accounting policy using a limited language, with high expressiveness but predictable execution times. This is evaluated within a novel resource economy, in which physical resources, trust and money are treated homogeneously. A second-order trust model continually updates trustworthiness opinions, based on contract performance; trust delegation certificates support flexible, distributed extension of these trust relationships. The introspectible contracts, resource and trust models together provide accountability and resilience, which are particularly important for large-scale distributed computation initiatives such as the Grid. Thus participants can take calculated risks, based on expressed policies and trust, and rationally choose which contracts to perform.
Keywords :
client-server systems; computer networks; contracts; security of data; telecommunication security; Grid; accountable contracts; accounting policies; client server system; contract protocol; execution times; high-level computer services; large-scale distributed computation; resource economy; resource usage; second-order trust model; security; trust delegation certificates; untrustworthy participants; virtual resource economy; Contracts; Distributed computing; Grid computing; Laboratories; Large-scale systems; Network servers; Particle measurements; Protection; Resource management; Robustness;
Conference_Titel :
Policies for Distributed Systems and Networks, 2002. Proceedings. Third International Workshop on
Print_ISBN :
0-7695-1611-4
DOI :
10.1109/POLICY.2002.1011296