Published: July 21, 2008
Author(s)
Anoop Singhal
Conference
Name: 22nd Annual IFIP WG 11.3 Working Conference on Data and Applications Security
Dates: July 13-16, 2008
Location: London, United Kingdom
Citation: Data and Applications Security XXII, Lecture Notes in Computer Science vol. 5094, pp. 158
Announcement
Web services-based computing is currently an important driver for the software industry. While several standards bodies (such as W3C and OASIS) are laying the foundation for Web services security, several research problems must be solved to make secure Web services a reality. This talk will present techniques for Web services security and some of the challenges and recommendations for secure web services. This paper is based on our experience in developing the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) Special Publication SP 800-95, “Guide to Secure Web Services”. Some of the challenges for secure web services are: 1) End to End Quality of Service and Protection, 2) Availability of Service, 3) Protection from Command Injection Attacks, 4) Identity Management. To adequately support the needs of Web services-based applications, effective risk management and appropriate deployment of alternate countermeasures are essential. Defense-in-depth through security engineering, secure software development, and architecture risk analysis can provide the robustness and reliability required by these applications.
Web services-based computing is currently an important driver for the software industry. While several standards bodies (such as W3C and OASIS) are laying the foundation for Web services security, several research problems must be solved to make secure Web services a reality. This talk will present...
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Web services-based computing is currently an important driver for the software industry. While several standards bodies (such as W3C and OASIS) are laying the foundation for Web services security, several research problems must be solved to make secure Web services a reality. This talk will present techniques for Web services security and some of the challenges and recommendations for secure web services. This paper is based on our experience in developing the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) Special Publication SP 800-95, “Guide to Secure Web Services”. Some of the challenges for secure web services are: 1) End to End Quality of Service and Protection, 2) Availability of Service, 3) Protection from Command Injection Attacks, 4) Identity Management. To adequately support the needs of Web services-based applications, effective risk management and appropriate deployment of alternate countermeasures are essential. Defense-in-depth through security engineering, secure software development, and architecture risk analysis can provide the robustness and reliability required by these applications.
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Keywords
confidentiality; identity management; integrity; Web Services Security
Control Families
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