A contextual privacy-aware access control model for network monitoring workflows: work in progress
FPS'11 Proceedings of the 4th Canada-France MITACS conference on Foundations and Practice of Security
A workflow checking approach for inherent privacy awareness in network monitoring
DPM'11 Proceedings of the 6th international conference, and 4th international conference on Data Privacy Management and Autonomous Spontaneus Security
A privacy-aware access control model for distributed network monitoring
Computers and Electrical Engineering
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Despite the usefulness of passive network monitoring for the operation, maintenance, control and protection of communication networks, as well as law enforcement, network monitoring activities are surrounded by serious privacy implications. In this paper, an innovative approach for privacy-preserving authorization and access control to data originating from passive network monitoring is described. The proposed framework relies on an ontological model for the specification of the access control policies, which are evaluated and enforced on a two-phase and two-stage basis by a system that intercedes between the network link and the monitoring applications. The two stages refer to controlled access regarding both the data that are disclosed to the monitoring application from the mediating system and the raw data that the mediator retrieves from the network link. On the other hand, the two phases concern respectively the execution of “static” and “dynamic” control; the former enforces the rules that are a priori applicable, grounded on the data, role and purpose semantics, while the latter evaluates the real-time contextual parameters for the adaptation of the access control procedures to the particular conditions underlying a request.