- Home
- Search Results
- Page 1 of 1
Search for: All records
-
Total Resources1
- Resource Type
-
0001000000000000
- More
- Availability
-
10
- Author / Contributor
- Filter by Author / Creator
-
-
Bates, Adam (1)
-
Kandikuppa, Anant (1)
-
Liu, Jason (1)
-
#Tyler Phillips, Kenneth E. (0)
-
#Willis, Ciara (0)
-
& Abreu-Ramos, E. D. (0)
-
& Abramson, C. I. (0)
-
& Abreu-Ramos, E. D. (0)
-
& Adams, S.G. (0)
-
& Ahmed, K. (0)
-
& Ahmed, Khadija. (0)
-
& Aina, D.K. Jr. (0)
-
& Akcil-Okan, O. (0)
-
& Akuom, D. (0)
-
& Aleven, V. (0)
-
& Andrews-Larson, C. (0)
-
& Archibald, J. (0)
-
& Arnett, N. (0)
-
& Arya, G. (0)
-
& Attari, S. Z. (0)
-
- Filter by Editor
-
-
& Spizer, S. M. (0)
-
& . Spizer, S. (0)
-
& Ahn, J. (0)
-
& Bateiha, S. (0)
-
& Bosch, N. (0)
-
& Brennan K. (0)
-
& Brennan, K. (0)
-
& Chen, B. (0)
-
& Chen, Bodong (0)
-
& Drown, S. (0)
-
& Ferretti, F. (0)
-
& Higgins, A. (0)
-
& J. Peters (0)
-
& Kali, Y. (0)
-
& Ruiz-Arias, P.M. (0)
-
& S. Spitzer (0)
-
& Sahin. I. (0)
-
& Spitzer, S. (0)
-
& Spitzer, S.M. (0)
-
(submitted - in Review for IEEE ICASSP-2024) (0)
-
-
Have feedback or suggestions for a way to improve these results?
!
Note: When clicking on a Digital Object Identifier (DOI) number, you will be taken to an external site maintained by the publisher.
Some full text articles may not yet be available without a charge during the embargo (administrative interval).
What is a DOI Number?
Some links on this page may take you to non-federal websites. Their policies may differ from this site.
-
Information flow control is a canonical approach to access control in systems, allowing administrators to assure confidentiality and integrity through restricting the flow of data. Decentralized Information Flow Control (DIFC) harnesses application-layer semantics to allow more precise and accurate mediation of data. Unfortunately, past approaches to DIFC have depended on dedicated instrumentation efforts or developer buy-in. Thus, while DIFC has existed for decades, it has seen little-to-no adoption in commodity systems; the requirement for complete redesign or retrofitting of programs has proven too high a barrier. In this work, we make the surprising observation that developers have already unwittingly performed the instrumentation efforts required for DIFC — application event logging, a software development best practice used for telemetry and debugging, often contains the information needed to identify application-layer event processes that DIFC mediates. We present T-difc, a kernel-layer reference monitor framework that leverages the insights of application event logs to perform precise decentralized flow control. T-difc identifies and extracts these application events as they are created by monitoring application I/O to log files, then references an administrator-specified security policy to assign data labels and mediate the flow of data through the system. To our knowledge, T-difc is the first approach to DIFC that does not require developer support or custom instrumentation. In a survey of 15 popular open source applications, we demonstrate that T-difc works seamlessly on a variety of popular open source programs while imposing negligible runtime overhead on realistic policies and workloads. Thus, T-difc demonstrates a transparent and non-invasive path forward for the dissemination of decentralized information flow controls.more » « less