Design Alternatives for Computer Network Security, Volume 1; Volume 13The Bureau, 1978 - 159 pages |
From inside the book
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Page 14
... attempted ) on his behalf . Even if accesses are transparent to the user , the fact that they are being performed may need to be made available , at least as an option . 2 . A mechanism to ensure that the user can control accesses on ...
... attempted ) on his behalf . Even if accesses are transparent to the user , the fact that they are being performed may need to be made available , at least as an option . 2 . A mechanism to ensure that the user can control accesses on ...
Page 32
... attempt to meet these requirements . These latter methods should be considered as potential analogies to how the system might operate , but not as requirements in themselves . 2.6.1 Accreditation of the Security Mechanisms Overall ...
... attempt to meet these requirements . These latter methods should be considered as potential analogies to how the system might operate , but not as requirements in themselves . 2.6.1 Accreditation of the Security Mechanisms Overall ...
Page 36
... attempt to solve the user - oriented problems of the HOSTS ( e.g. , by tutorial , directory , or other services ) , its design should consider the varying usage - experience , typing abilities , etc. of the user community , and provide ...
... attempt to solve the user - oriented problems of the HOSTS ( e.g. , by tutorial , directory , or other services ) , its design should consider the varying usage - experience , typing abilities , etc. of the user community , and provide ...
Page 47
... attempted access on his behalf : The SC could be designed such that it would notify the original requestor of such N - th party accesses , although other constraints may not make this feasible to carry out . For example , a user's ...
... attempted access on his behalf : The SC could be designed such that it would notify the original requestor of such N - th party accesses , although other constraints may not make this feasible to carry out . For example , a user's ...
Page 60
... on a set - up attempt . Crossing inter - network boundaries ( gateways ) . Initial control message contents , e.g. , should requestor profile information be sent ? 3.3.1 Control Over the Initial Requestor - to - SC 60 CONNECTION.
... on a set - up attempt . Crossing inter - network boundaries ( gateways ) . Initial control message contents , e.g. , should requestor profile information be sent ? 3.3.1 Control Over the Initial Requestor - to - SC 60 CONNECTION.
Common terms and phrases
access authorization access control access control matrix access group additional addressing approach aspects audit information basic buffer capabilities checking clear text communications net communications network communications path connection creation considered control commands control information control messages crypto cryptographic devices data and control Data Encryption Standard data processing dialog distributed domain enciphered encipherment encryption devices ensure entities error control fail-secure functions gateway handled HOST computers HOST-level HOST's ICD's identification/authentication implicit initial interface involved issues matrix methods mini-HOST mode multiplexed N-th party accesses N-th party authentication network control programs Network Security Center node object one-time passwords operation pair passwords performed physical and procedural possible private key problems procedural controls processor profile information protection protocol Reference Monitor relay request requestor requirements resource SC-to-SC SC's scheme security control mechanism separate sequence numbers server structure structured programming terminal tradeoffs updates usage utilized
Popular passages
Page iv - In no case does such identification imply recommendation or endorsement by the National Bureau of Standards...