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Labelled deduction is an approach to providing frameworks for
presenting and using different logics in a uniform and natural way
by enriching the language of a logic with additional information of
a semantic proof-theoretical nature. Labelled deduction systems
often possess attractive properties, such as modularity in the way
that families of related logics are presented, parameterised proofs
of metatheoretic properties, and ease of mechanisability. It is
thus not surprising that labelled deduction has been applied to
problems in computer science, AI, mathematical logic, cognitive
science, philosophy and computational linguistics - for example,
formalizing and reasoning about dynamic state oriented' properties
such as knowledge, belief, time, space, and resources.
When the SCION project started in 2009, the goal was to create an
architecture offering high availability and security for basic
point-to-point communication. In the five years since the
publication of SCION: A Secure Internet Architecture, this
next-generation Internet architecture has evolved in terms of both
design and deployment. On the one hand, there has been development
of exciting new concepts and systems, including a new global
time-synchronization system, an inter-domain approach for bandwidth
reservations called COLIBRI, and Green Networking, which allows
combating global climate change on three fronts. On the other hand,
SCION is now also in production use by the Swiss financial
ecosystem, and enables participants such as the Swiss National
Bank, the Swiss provider of clearing services (SIX), and all Swiss
financial institutes to communicate securely and reliably with each
other via the Secure Swiss Finance Network. This unique guidebook
provides an updated description of SCION's main components,
covering new research topics and the most recent deployments. In
particular, it presents in-depth discussion of formal verification
efforts. Importantly, it offers a comprehensive, thorough
description of the current SCION system: Describes the principles
that guided SCION's design as a secure and robust Internet
architecture Provides a comprehensive description of the next
evolution in the way data finds its way through the Internet
Explains how SCION can contribute to reducing carbon emissions, by
introducing SCION Green Networking Demonstrates how SCION not only
functions in academic settings but also works in production
deployments Discusses additional use cases for driving SCION's
adoption Presents the approaches for formal verification of
protocols and code Illustrated with many colorful figures,
pictures, and diagrams, allowing easy access to the concepts and
use cases Assembled by a team with extensive experience in the
fields of computer networks and security, this text/reference is
suitable for researchers, practitioners, and graduate students
interested in network security. Also, readers with limited
background in computer networking but with a desire to know more
about SCION will benefit from an overview of relevant chapters in
the beginning of the book.
This book explores fundamental principles for securing IT systems
and illustrates them with hands-on experiments that may be carried
out by the reader using accompanying software. The experiments
highlight key information security problems that arise in modern
operating systems, networks, and web applications. The authors
explain how to identify and exploit such problems and they show
different countermeasures and their implementation. The reader thus
gains a detailed understanding of how vulnerabilities arise and
practical experience tackling them. After presenting the basics of
security principles, virtual environments, and network services,
the authors explain the core security principles of authentication
and access control, logging and log analysis, web application
security, certificates and public-key cryptography, and risk
management. The book concludes with appendices on the design of
related courses, report templates, and the basics of Linux as
needed for the assignments. The authors have successfully taught IT
security to students and professionals using the content of this
book and the laboratory setting it describes. The book can be used
in undergraduate or graduate laboratory courses, complementing more
theoretically oriented courses, and it can also be used for
self-study by IT professionals who want hands-on experience in
applied information security. The authors' supporting software is
freely available online and the text is supported throughout with
exercises.
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Principles of Security and Trust - Second International Conference, POST 2013, Held as Part of the European Joint Conferences on Theory and Practice of Software, ETAPS 2013, Rome, Italy, March 16-24, 2013, Proceedings (Paperback, 2013 ed.)
David Basin, John C. Mitchell
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R1,473
Discovery Miles 14 730
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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This book constitutes the refereed proceedings of the Second
International Conference on Principles of Security and Trust, POST
2013, held as part of the European Joint Conference on Theory and
Practice of Software, ETAPS 2013, in Rome, Italy, in March 2013.
The 14 papers included in this volume were carefully reviewed and
selected from 59 submissions. They deal with the theoretical and
foundational aspects of security and trust such as new theoretical
results, practical applications of existing foundational ideas, and
innovative theoretical approaches stimulated by pressing practical
problems.
Labelled deduction is an approach to providing frameworks for
presenting and using different logics in a uniform and natural way
by enriching the language of a logic with additional information of
a semantic proof-theoretical nature. Labelled deduction systems
often possess attractive properties, such as modularity in the way
that families of related logics are presented, parameterised proofs
of metatheoretic properties, and ease of mechanisability. It is
thus not surprising that labelled deduction has been applied to
problems in computer science, AI, mathematical logic, cognitive
science, philosophy and computational linguistics - for example,
formalizing and reasoning about dynamic state oriented' properties
such as knowledge, belief, time, space, and resources.
Rippling is a radically new technique for the automation of
mathematical reasoning. It is widely applicable whenever a goal is
to be proved from one or more syntactically similar givens. It was
originally developed for inductive proofs, where the goal was the
induction conclusion and the givens were the induction hypotheses.
It has proved to be applicable to a much wider class of tasks, from
summing series via analysis to general equational reasoning. The
application to induction has especially important practical
implications in the building of dependable IT systems, and provides
solutions to issues such as the problem of combinatorial explosion.
Rippling is the first of many new search control techniques based
on formula annotation; some additional annotated reasoning
techniques are also described here. This systematic and
comprehensive introduction to rippling, and to the wider subject of
automated inductive theorem proving, will be welcomed by
researchers and graduate students alike.
This volume constitutes the proceedings of the 2nd International
Joint C- ference on Automated Reasoning (IJCAR 2004) held July 4 8,
2004 in Cork, Ireland. IJCAR 2004 continued the tradition
established at the ?rst IJCAR in Siena, Italyin2001,
whichbroughttogetherdi?erentresearchcommunitieswo- ing in automated
reasoning. The current IJCAR is the fusion of the following
conferences: CADE: The International Conference on Automated
Deduction, CALCULEMUS: Symposium on the Integration of Symbolic
Computation and Mechanized Reasoning, FroCoS: Workshop on Frontiers
of Combining Systems, FTP: The International Workshop on
First-Order Theorem Proving, and TABLEAUX: The International
Conference on Automated Reasoning with Analytic Tableaux and
Related Methods. There were 74 research papers submitted to IJCAR
as well as 12 system descriptions. After extensive reviewing, 26
research papers and 6 system - scriptions were accepted for
presentation at the conference and publication in this volume. In
addition, this volume also contains papers from the three invited
speakers and a description of the CADE ATP system competition. We
would like to acknowledge the enormous amount of work put in by the
members of the program committee, the various organizing and
steering c- mittees, the IJCAR o?cials, the invited speakers, and
the additional referees named on the following pages. We would also
like to thank Achim Brucker and Barbara Geiser for their help in
producing this volume."
This volume constitutes the proceedings of the16th International
Conference on Theorem Proving in Higher Order Logics (TPHOLs 2003)
held September 8 12, 2003 in Rome, Italy. TPHOLs covers all aspects
of theorem proving in higher order logics as well as related topics
in theorem proving and veri?cation. TPHOLs 2003 was co-located with
TABLEAUX, the International Con- rence on Automated Reasoning with
Analytic Tableaux and Related Methods, and with Calculemus, the
Symposium on the Integration of Symbolic Compu- tion and Mechanized
Reasoning. There were 50 papers submitted to TPHOLs in the full
research category, each of which was refereed by at least 3
reviewers, selected by the program c-
mittee.Ofthesesubmissions,21wereacceptedforpresentationattheconference
and publication in this volume. In keeping with tradition, TPHOLs
2003 also o?ered a venue for the presentation of work in progress,
where researchers - vite discussion by means of a brief preliminary
talk and then discuss their work at a poster session. A
supplementary proceedings containing associated papers for work in
progress was published by the computer science department at the
Universit] at Freiburg. The organizers are grateful to Jean-Raymond
Abrial, Patrick Lincoln, and Dale Miller for agreeing to give
invited talks at TPHOLs 2003. The TPHOLs conference traditionally
changes continent each year in order to maximize the chances that
researchers from around the world can attend."
When the SCION project started in 2009, the goal was to create an
architecture offering high availability and security for basic
point-to-point communication. In the five years since the
publication of SCION: A Secure Internet
Architecture, this next-generation Internet architecture has
evolved in terms of both design and deployment. On the one hand,
there has been development of exciting new concepts and systems,
including a new global time-synchronization system, an inter-domain
approach for bandwidth reservations called COLIBRI, and Green
Networking, which allows combating global climate change on three
fronts. On the other hand, SCION is now also in production use by
the Swiss financial ecosystem, and enables participants such as the
Swiss National Bank, the Swiss provider of clearing services (SIX),
and all Swiss financial institutes to communicate securely and
reliably with each other via the Secure Swiss Finance Network. This
unique guidebook provides an updated description of SCION's main
components, covering new research topics and the most recent
deployments. In particular, it presents in-depth discussion of
formal verification efforts. Importantly, it offers a
comprehensive, thorough description of the current SCION system:
Describes the principles that guided SCION's design as a secure and
robust Internet architecture Provides a comprehensive description
of the next evolution in the way data finds its way through the
Internet Explains how SCION can contribute to reducing carbon
emissions, by introducing SCION Green Networking Demonstrates how
SCION not only functions in academic settings but also works in
production deployments Discusses additional use cases for driving
SCION's adoption Presents the approaches for formal verification of
protocols and code  Illustrated with many colorful figures,
pictures, and diagrams, allowing easy access to the concepts and
use cases Assembled by a team with extensive experience in
the fields of computer networks and security, this text/reference
is suitable for researchers, practitioners, and graduate students
interested in network security. Also, readers with limited
background in computer networking but with a desire to know more
about SCION will benefit from an overview of relevant chapters in
the beginning of the book.
Due to the very old age and scarcity of this book, many of the
pages may be hard to read due to the blurring of the original text,
possible missing pages, missing text and other issues beyond our
control.
Due to the very old age and scarcity of this book, many of the
pages may be hard to read due to the blurring of the original text,
possible missing pages, missing text and other issues beyond our
control.
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