The Research of Workflow Access Control Methods Based on Spring Acegi

2013 ◽  
Vol 756-759 ◽  
pp. 710-714
Author(s):  
Xu Yin ◽  
Hai Bei Zheng

Access control through restricting users to access to resources, prevents invasion of illegal users and legal users access to unauthorized resources to ensure integrity and privacy of workflow data, which is the key of workflow security mechanism. According to the identity authentication and access authority control, the paper analyzes the safety management entrusted mechanism of Acegi which is Spring security framework, makes full use of its characteristics of depended injection (DI), and realizes statement and configuration of all kinds of safety components such as authentication management and access decision management.

2009 ◽  
Vol 29 (7) ◽  
pp. 2000-2002
Author(s):  
Qin CHEN ◽  
Huan YUAN ◽  
Jian-hua FENG

2015 ◽  
Vol 3 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Reza Alimoradi

The goal of an identification procedure is access control. Methods that permit an identification are called identification protocols. In this paper, first we introduced quaternion numbers. In addition we proposed a new identification scheme based on quaternions. Finally, the security of our scheme is analyzed.


2017 ◽  
Vol 7 (1.1) ◽  
pp. 322
Author(s):  
K. V. V. Satyanarayana ◽  
J. Mahathi ◽  
V. V. R. Srikar ◽  
S.K. Sai Babu

Now-a-days, usage of cloud is getting more popular and for the safety the security is being enhanced every day from time to time. Multiple security techniques are being implemented.Attribute based security is one of the concepts especially for basics of the cipher-text based, but the user's attributes were given by the multiple authorities. So, the multi-authority with cipher-text encryption is emerging at present. In this, we will see why the cipher-text based is important and different security models with the multi-authority with the revocation in the different levels in the security models.


Author(s):  
Alberto De la Rosa Algarín ◽  
Steven A. Demurjian ◽  
Timoteus B. Ziminski ◽  
Yaira K. Rivera Sánchez ◽  
Robert Kuykendall

Today’s applications are often constructed by bringing together functionality from multiple systems that utilize varied technologies (e.g. application programming interfaces, Web services, cloud computing, data mining) and alternative standards (e.g. XML, RDF, OWL, JSON, etc.) for communication. Most such applications achieve interoperability via the eXtensible Markup Language (XML), the de facto document standard for information exchange in domains such as library repositories, collaborative software development, health informatics, etc. The use of a common data format facilitates exchange and interoperability across heterogeneous systems, but challenges in the aspect of security arise (e.g. sharing policies, ownership, permissions, etc.). In such situations, one key security challenge is to integrate the local security (existing systems) into a global solution for the application being constructed and deployed. In this chapter, the authors present a Role-Based Access Control (RBAC) security framework for XML, which utilizes extensions to the Unified Modeling Language (UML) to generate eXtensible Access Control Markup Language (XACML) policies that target XML schemas and instances for any application, and provides both the separation and reconciliation of local and global security policies across systems. To demonstrate the framework, they provide a case study in health care, using the XML standards Health Level Seven’s (HL7) Clinical Document Architecture (CDA) and the Continuity of Care Record (CCR). These standards are utilized for the transportation of private and identifiable information between stakeholders (e.g. a hospital with an electronic health record, a clinic’s electronic health record, a pharmacy system, etc.), requiring not only a high level of security but also compliance to legal entities. For this reason, it is not only necessary to secure private information, but for its application to be flexible enough so that updating security policies that affect millions of documents does not incur a large monetary or computational cost; such privacy could similarly involve large banks and credit card companies that have similar information to protect to deter identity theft. The authors demonstrate the security framework with two in-house developed applications: a mobile medication management application and a medication reconciliation application. They also detail future trends that present even more challenges in providing security at global and local levels for platforms such as Microsoft HealthVault, Harvard SMART, Open mHealth, and open electronic health record systems. These platforms utilize XML, equivalent information exchange document standards (e.g., JSON), or semantically augmented structures (e.g., RDF and OWL). Even though the primary use of these platforms is in healthcare, they present a clear picture of how diverse the information exchange process can be. As a result, they represent challenges that are domain independent, thus becoming concrete examples of future trends and issues that require a robust approach towards security.


2020 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
pp. 82-91
Author(s):  
Suraj Krishna Patil ◽  
Sandipkumar Chandrakant Sagare ◽  
Alankar Shantaram Shelar

Privacy is the key factor to handle personal and sensitive data, which in large chunks, is stored by database management systems (DBMS). It provides tools and mechanisms to access and analyze data within it. Privacy preservation converts original data into some unknown form, thus protecting personal and sensitive information. Different access control mechanisms such as discretionary access control, mandatory access control is used in DBMS. However, they hardly consider purpose and role-based access control in DBMS, which incorporates policy specification and enforcement. The role based access control (RBAC) regulates the access to resources based on the roles of individual users. Purpose based access control (PuBAC) regulates the access to resources based on purpose for which data can be accessed. It regulates execution of queries based on purpose. The PuRBAC system uses the policies of both, i.e. PuBAC and RBAC, to enforce within RDBMS.


Author(s):  
Abdus Sattar Chaudry ◽  
Zhihong Wang

Features of current electronic journals systems have been reviewed and practices of handling e-journals on serials control work. While most of the delivery and access systems are similar in browsing and searching facilities, there are variations in pricing policies, archiving, licensing, and access control methods that create problems for information institutions.


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