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Security and survivability of distributed systems: an overview
Kyamakya, K.   Jobman, K.   Meincke, M.  
Inst. for Commun. Eng., Hannover Univ.;

This paper appears in: MILCOM 2000. 21st Century Military Communications Conference Proceedings
Publication Date: 2000
Volume: 1,  On page(s): 449-454 vol.1
Meeting Date: 10/22/2000 - 10/25/2000
Location: Los Angeles, CA, USA
ISBN: 0-7803-6521-6
References Cited: 13
INSPEC Accession Number: 7022931
Digital Object Identifier: 10.1109/MILCOM.2000.904993
Current Version Published: 2002-08-06

Abstract
Society is growing increasingly dependent upon large-scale, highly distributed systems that operate in unbounded network environments, which like the Internet, have no central administrative control and no unified security policy. Despite the best efforts of security practitioners, no amount of system hardening can assure that a system that is connected to an unbounded network will be invulnerable to attack. The discipline of network survivability and security can help ensure that such systems can deliver essential services and maintain essential properties such as integrity, confidentiality and performance, despite the presence of intrusion. Unlike the traditional security policies that require central control for instance or administration, survivability is intended to address unbounded network environments. Furthermore, since survivability requires robustness under conditions of intrusion, failure, or accident, it includes the concept of fault tolerance. This paper formulates the basic issues to be solved in this new field, discusses and comments some current solution concepts and finally outlines the most challenging future research avenues

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