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Security and Trust Issues in Ubiquitous Environments — The Business-to-Employee Dimension
Tokyo, Japan January 26-January 30
DOI Bookmark: http://doi.ieeecomputersociety.org/10.1109/SAINTW.2004.12687232004 Symposium on Applications and th ...
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Thomas Walter, DoCoMo Euro-Labs
Laurent Bussard, Institut Eur?com
Philip Robinson, SAP AG, CEC
Yves Roudier, Institut Eur?com

Ubiquitous applications and services combined with mobile business applications define a challenging context for security and trust. Besides the basic security requirements for controlled access, confidentiality, data integrity and accountability, it is essential to know whether devices surrounding a user are trusted and to distribute application tasks between those devices. We propose a development framework that combines security policies, certificates and an enforcement protocol as a solution to provide security and trust in ubiquitous applications and services.

Security policies define the constraints when, how and which mobile devices can be use in a mobile business application. Enforcement of policies makes use of certificates, defined for users and devices, which determine delegable application tasks and trustworthiness of devices. Our proposed framework is flexible — can be dynamically changed, is adaptable — can be dynamically extended, and is scalable — policies and certificates are evaluated on demand and in a distributed fashion.

Citation:
Thomas Walter, Laurent Bussard, Philip Robinson, Yves Roudier, "Security and Trust Issues in Ubiquitous Environments — The Business-to-Employee Dimension," saint-w, pp.696, 2004 Symposium on Applications and the Internet-Workshops (SAINT 2004 Workshops), 2004
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