Notes for February 9, 1998 1. Greetings and felicitations! a. Reading: Pfleeger, pp. 176198, 277280; Garfinkel & Spaddord, pp. 327340 2. Puzzle 3. Capabilities a. C-Lists b. copy right (copy flag) 4. Lattice Model a. Set of classes SC is a partially ordered set under relation with GLB (), LUB () b. Note: is reflexive, transitive, antisymmetric c. Application to MLS: forms a lattice with elements being the Cartesian product of the lin- ear lattice of levels and the subset lattics of categories d. Examples: (A, C) (A, C) iff A A and C C; (A, C) (A, C) = (max(A, A), C C) (A, C) (A, C) = (min(A, A), C C) 5. ORCON (Originator Controlled; Graubert) a. Document/information can be passed on with approval of originator; real world justifica- tion is that originator of document trusts recipients not to release documents which they should not. b. Untrusted subject x marks object O ORCON on behalf of organization X and indicates it is releasable to subjects acting on behalf of organization Y. not releasable to subjects acting on behalf of other organizations without Xs permission any copies made have the same restriction c. DAC: cant do this as the restriction would not copy over (y reads O into C, puts its own ACL on C) d. MAC: separate category withO, x, y. y wants to read O, copy to C; MAC means C has same category as O, x, y, so cant give z access to C. Say a new organization w wants to provide data in B to y but not to be shared with x or z. Cant use Os category. Hence you get explosion of categories. Real world parallel: individuals are briefed into a category and those represent a formal need to know policy that is standard across the entity; ORCON has no central clearing- house to categorize data; originator makes rules. 6. Solution? a. owner of object cant change ACLs relationship with object (MAC characteristic) b. on copy, ACL is copied as well (MAC characteristic) c. access control restrictions can be tailored on a subject/object basis (DAC characteristic) 7. Malicious logic a. Quickly review Trojan horses, viruses, bacteria b. Logic Bombs c. Worms (Schoch and Hupp) 8. Review trust and TCB a. Notion is informal b. Assume trusted components called by untrusted programs [ ended here ]