Security Protocols XXVIII, 1st ed. 2023 28th International Workshop, Cambridge, UK, March 27–28, 2023, Revised Selected Papers Lecture Notes in Computer Science Series, Vol. 14186
Coordonnateurs : Stajano Frank, Matyáš Vashek, Christianson Bruce, Anderson Jonathan
This book constitutes the refereed post-conference proceedings of the 28th International Workshop on Security Protocols, held in Cambridge, UK, during March 27?28, 2023.
Thirteen papers out of 23 submissions were selected for publication in this book, presented together with the respective transcripts of discussions. The theme of this year's workshop was ?Humans in security protocols ? are we learning from mistakes??
The topics covered are securing the human endpoint and proving humans correct.
Sleepwalking into Disaster? Requirements Engineering for Digital Cash.- Transporting a Secret Using Destructively-Read Memory.- Authentication of IT Professionals in the Wild - A Survey.- Incentives and Censorship Resistance for Mixnets Revisited.- Can’t Keep them Away: The Failures of Anti-Stalking Protocols in Personal Item Tracking Devices.- Who is Benefiting from Your Fitness Data? A Privacy Analysis of Smartwatches.- Trusted Introductions for Secure Messaging.- Choosing Your Friends: Shaping Ethical Use of Anonymity Networks.- One Protocol to Rule them All? On Securing Interoperable Messaging.- If it’s Provably Secure, it Probably isn’t: Why Learning from Proof Failure is Hard.- Towards Human-Centric Endpoint Security.- Determining an Economic Value of High Assurance for Commodity Software Security.- Blind Auditing and Probabilistic Access Controls.
Date de parution : 10-2023
Ouvrage de 271 p.
15.5x23.5 cm
Disponible chez l'éditeur (délai d'approvisionnement : 15 jours).
Prix indicatif 61,18 €
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Mots-clés :
Security protocols; Software security engineering; Social network security and privacy; Domain-specific security and privacy architectures; Economics of security and privacy; Social aspects of security and privacy; Privacy protections; Usability in security and privacy; Formal security models; Security requirements; Trust frameworks; Authentication; Pseudonymity; anonymity and untraceability; Privacy-preserving protocols; Vulnerability management; Data anonymization and sanitization