Multiparadigm communications in Java for grid computing
Communications of the ACM
Virtual monotonic counters and count-limited objects using a TPM without a trusted OS
Proceedings of the first ACM workshop on Scalable trusted computing
Journal of Parallel and Distributed Computing - Special issue: Security in grid and distributed systems
Mobile Agents and the Deus Ex Machina
AINAW '07 Proceedings of the 21st International Conference on Advanced Information Networking and Applications Workshops - Volume 02
A practical guide to trusted computing
A practical guide to trusted computing
TGC'07 Proceedings of the 3rd conference on Trustworthy global computing
Enhancing grid security using trusted virtualization
ATC'07 Proceedings of the 4th international conference on Autonomic and Trusted Computing
µTSS: a simplified trusted software stack
TRUST'10 Proceedings of the 3rd international conference on Trust and trustworthy computing
Specification and Standardization of a Java Trusted Computing API
Software—Practice & Experience
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Software independence from hardware platforms is an important feature of growing significance, given the emergence of new distributed computing paradigms. It would be desirable to extend the Trusted Computing mechanisms offered by the Trusted Platform Module into the platform independent Java environment. However, there is currently no generally accepted Trusted Computing API for Java. In this paper, we describe the design of a high-level API for Trusted Computing in Java, which is set to become the new industry standard for Java applications. We describe the current state of the standardization effort being undertaken in Java Specification Request 321 (JSR321).