A community authorization service for group collaboration
University of Southern California · Southern States University · +2 more institutions
Abstract
In "grids" and "collaboratories", we find distributed communities of resource providers and resource consumers, within which often complex and dynamic policies govern who can use which resources for which purpose. We propose a new approach to the representation, maintenance and enforcement of such policies that provides a scalable mechanism for specifying and enforcing these policies. Our approach allows resource providers to delegate some of the authority for maintaining fine-grained access control policies to communities, while still maintaining ultimate control over their resources. We also describe a prototype implementation of this approach and an application in a data management context.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 77.88
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 28
Authors
5Topics & keywords
- Delegate
- Computer science
- Scalability
- Context (archaeology)
- Access control
- Resource (disambiguation)
- Service provider
- Enforcement