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NSPW 2005: Lake Arrowhead, California, USA
- Simon N. Foley:
Proceedings of the New Security Paradigms Workshop 2005, Lake Arrowhead, California, USA, September 20-23, 2005. ACM 2005, ISBN 1-59593-317-4
Natural selection and monoculture
- Richard Ford, Mark Bush, Alex Boulatov:
Internet instability and disturbance: goal or menace? 3-8
Diversity as a computer defense mechanism
- Carol Taylor, Jim Alves-Foss:
Diversity as a computer defense mechanism. 11-14 - Carol Taylor:
Diversity: the biological perspective position statement. 15-16 - Bev Littlewood:
"Diversity as a computer defense mechanism". 17-18 - John McHugh:
Software diversity: use of diversity as a defense mechanism. 19-20 - Roy A. Maxion:
Use of diversity as a defense mechanism. 21-22
Design considerations
- Christian W. Probst, Andreas Gal, Michael Franz:
Average case vs. worst case: margins of safety in system design. 25-32 - Ivan Flechais, Jens Riegelsberger, Martina Angela Sasse:
Divide and conquer: the role of trust and assurance in the design of secure socio-technical systems. 33-41
Authentication
- Julie Thorpe, Paul C. van Oorschot, Anil Somayaji:
Pass-thoughts: authenticating with our minds. 45-56 - Paul C. van Oorschot:
Message authentication by integrity with public corroboration. 57-63
Managing authority
- Konstantin Beznosov:
Flooding and recycling authorizations. 67-72
The insider problem revisited
- Matt Bishop:
The insider problem revisited. 75-76 - Matt Bishop:
Position: "insider" is relative. 77-78 - Irene Schwarting:
Position paper. 79-81
Forensics
- Sean Peisert, Sidney Karin, Matt Bishop, Keith Marzullo:
Principles-driven forensic analysis. 85-93
Modelling
- John P. McDermott:
Visual security protocol modeling. 97-109 - Carla Marceau, Robert A. Joyce:
Empirical privilege profiling. 111-118 - Michael E. Locasto, Stelios Sidiroglou, Angelos D. Keromytis:
Speculative virtual verification: policy-constrained speculative execution. 119-124
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