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Contexts and Context-based Access Control Model

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Contexts and Context-based Access Control Model PhD Dissertation Progress Report Candidate: Alvaro E. Escobar Advisors: Dr. Maria Petrie Dr. Eduardo Fernandez – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Contexts and Context-based Access Control Model


1
Contexts and Context-based Access Control Model
  • PhD Dissertation Progress Report
  • Candidate Alvaro E. Escobar
  • Advisors
  • Dr. Maria Petrie
  • Dr. Eduardo Fernandez

Department of Computer Science and
Engineering Florida Atlantic University, Boca
Raton FL. 12/15/2005
2
Agenda
  • What is Context?
  • Context Models
  • What is Profile
  • Profile Models
  • Policy and Access Control
  • Access Control Models
  • Conclusions
  • Future Work

3
What is Context?
  • The set of facts and/or circumstances that
    surround a situation or event. Google.
  • The location and identities of nearby people and
    objects and changes to those objects. Sch95
  • The logical set of resources accessible to a
    client during a service session depending on
    several factors, such as client location, access
    device capabilities, management policies of the
    access locality, subscribed services, user
    preferences, and level of trust. Bel03 Cor04
  • The composition of context elements which belong
    to either physical or organizational contexts.
    The physical context identifies spaces, locations
    and devices. The organizational context includes
    roles, groups, calendars, activities, processes
    and applications. Kir05
  • Is a process of interacting with an ever-changing
    environment composed of reconfigurable, mobile
    and distributed resources. Cou05.
  • Is a distinction between the notion of an instant
    snapshot of observable variables (a situation)
    and the composition of those observable variables
    over time (a context) Cou02.

4
Context Models
Corradis Context and Access Control Model
5
Context Models
Kirsch-Pinheiros Class model for Context Part
1 (Taken from Kir05)
6
Context Models
Kirsch-Pinheiros Class model for Context Part
2 (Taken from Kir05)
7
Context Models
8
What is Context made of?
  • Critical sub-processes of a context are
  • Collect the set of locally available resources.
    (resources potentially visible in the users
    physical location)
  • Filter the visible resources through access
    control policies. (refined potentially visible
    resources)
  • Map them onto the users goals, preferences and
    activities described by profiles. (refine
    resources even more)
  • Resources vs Observables. (What about time?)

9
What is a Profile?
  • Profiles represent characteristics, capabilities,
    and requirements of users, devices, and service
    components. Bel03.
  • User profiles personal preferences, interests,
    privacy requirements, and subscribed services.
  • Device profiles hardware/software
    characteristics of devices.
  • Service component profiles service interface,
    properties for binding management decisions.
  • Site profiles All resources available at one
    location.

10
What is a Profile?
  • Descriptions of users potential contexts and
    filtering rules that describe the users
    preferences, given a context Kir05
  • Comprehensive Structured Context Profiles (CSCP)
    based on the Resource Description Framework (RDF)
    Buc04,Bra01

11
Profile Models
Corradis Profile Model
12
Profile Models
13
Policy and Access Control
  • Policies express the choices of a ruling system
    behavior, in terms of the actions subjects
    can/must operate upon resources.Bel03
  • Access control policies specify the actions
    subjects are allowed to perform on resources
    depending on various types of conditions, e.g.,
    subject identity and resource state
  • Obligation policies define the actions subjects
    must perform on resources when specified
    conditions occur.
  • The automatic qualification of accessible
    resources depends on the client context, the
    current enforced management policies and the
    users personal preferences (profiles). Cor04

14
Access Control Model
Corradis Access Control Model
15
Context and CBAC Model
16
Conclusions
  • Context is a fundamental concept in mobile
    systems.
  • Different researchers use different variations of
    context.
  • We have tried here to unify and clarify this
    concept from three definitions of context.
  • We produced a model that summarizes their most
    relevant aspects.
  • This unified model can be expressed as a pattern
    and can be used as a guideline for the design of
    mobile systems.

17
Future Work
  • Work on the pattern model and characteristics.
  • Paper submission for International Workshop on
    Research Challenges in Security and Privacy for
    Mobile and Wireless Networks (WSPWN06) - March
    15-16, 2006, Miami FL.
  • Context-Aware Web Services Distributed and
    Parallel Databases Journal - Submission deadline
    March 15, 2006.
  • AMCIS Minitrack on Mobile Services - Submission
    deadline March 1, 2006.
  • Dissertation document completed by end of Summer
    06.

18
Contexts and Context-based Access Control Model
  • References
  • Bel03 P. Bellavista, A. Corradi, R. Montanari,
    C. Stefanelli, Context-Aware Middleware for
    Resource Management in the Wireless Internet,
    IEEE Transactions on Software Engineering. Vol.
    29, No. 12, December 2003. Page 1086.
  • Cor04 A. Corradi, R. Montanari, D. Tibaldi,
    Context-Based Access Control Management in
    Ubiquitous Environments, Network Computing and
    Applications, Proceeding of the Third IEEE
    International Symposium on (NCA'04), August 30 -
    September 01, 2004, Boston, MA.
  • Cou05 J. Coutaz, J. L. Crowley, S. Dobson D.
    Garlan. Context is key. Communications of the
    ACM. March 2005/Vol. 48, No. 3. Page 49.
  • Cou02 J. Coutaz and G. Rey. Foundations for a
    theory of contextors. Computer Aided Design of
    User Interfaces, Springer Verlag, 2002.
  • Cro02 J. Crowley, J. Coutaz, G. Rey, and P.
    Reignier. Perceptual components for
    context-aware computing. Proceedings of the
    Fourth International Conference of Ubiquitous
    Computing, (Göteburg, Sweden, Sept./Oct. 2002).
    Springer, 117134.
  • Fer05 E. B. Fernandez, M. M. Larrondo-Petrie,
    T. Sorgente, and M. VanHilst, "UML as a
    generalized access control model ".   Florida
    Atlantic University.
  • Kir05 M. Kirsch-Pinheiro, M. Villanova-Oliver,
    J. Gensel, H. Martin. Context-Aware Filtering
    for Collaborative Web Systems Adapting the
    Awareness Information to the Users Context 2005
    ACM Symposium on Applied Computing. SAC05, March
    13-17, 2005, Santa Fe, New Mexico, USA.
  • Lem04 T. Lemlouma, N. Layaïda, Context-aware
    adaptation for mobile devices. Proceedings of the
    IEEE International Conference on Mobile Data
    Management (Berkeley, CA, USA, January 19-22,
    2004). IEEE, 106-111.
  • Mon03 R. Montanari, P. Bellavista, A. Corradi,
    C.Stefanelli, Dynamic Binding in Mobile
    Applications a Middleware Approach, IEEE
    Internet Computing, Special Issue on Mobile
    Applications, Vol. 7, No. 2, March/April 2003.
  • Sch95 W. N. Schilit. A System Architecture for
    Context-Aware Mobile Computing. PhD thesis
    dissertation. Columbia University, 1995.
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