Yang-Hua Chu
MIT/W3C
545 Technology Square
Cambridge Massachusetts 02139, USA
yhchu@mit.edu
Joan Feigenbaum
Brian LaMacchia
Paul Resnick
and
Martin Strauss
AT&T Laboratories
600 Mountain Avenue
Murray Hill New Jersey 07974, USA
jf@research.att.com,
bal@research.att.com,
presnick@research.att.com,
mstrauss@research.att.com
Digital signatures provide a mechanism for guaranteeing integrity and authenticity of Web content but not more general notions of security or trust. Web-aware applications must permit users to state clearly their own security policies and, of course, must provide the cryptographic tools for manipulating digital signatures. This paper describes the REFEREE trust management system for Web applications; REFEREE provides both a general policy-evaluation mechanism for Web clients and servers and a language for specifying trust policies. REFEREE places all trust decisions under explicit policy control; in the REFEREE model, every action, including evaluation of compliance with policy, happens under the control of some policy. That is, REFEREE is a system for writing policies about policies, as well as policies about cryptographic keys, PICS label bureaus, certification authorities, trust delegation, or anything else.
In this paper, we flesh out the need for trust management in Web applications, explain the design philosophy of the REFEREE trust management system, and describe a prototype implementation of REFEREE.
Web surfing is a dangerous sport. Downloaded software may contain viruses. Materials that appear to come from one source may in fact be spoofs provided by another source. Eavesdroppers may overhear credit card numbers or other sensitive information. Personal information may be collected legitimately but then used to violate one's privacy.
One way to approach these problems is to attempt to eliminate dangers. For example, the Java applet interpreter tries to provide an execution environment in which programs can only perform "harmless" actions. The PCC system (for "proof carrying code") requires mobile programs to prove to potential hosts that they are "harmless" [N, NL]. A wealth of cryptographic protocols attempt to eliminate dangers by enforcing secrecy or authenticity.
A complementary approach focuses on trust. To trust is to undertake a potentially dangerous operation knowing that it is potentially dangerous. A user might prefer to have proof of harmlessness, but weaker forms of evidence may also be sufficient. A recommendation from a close friend may convince someone to trust that a piece of software is virus-free. Someone may trust an insecure channel for transmission of a credit card number if the credit card company assumes liability for any fraudulent uses of the number.
Credentials and policies are the raw materials for making trust decisions. A credential is a statement, purportedly made by some speaker. A policy determines the conditions under which a particular action is allowed.
Following [BFL], we use the term trust management to refer to the problem of deciding whether requested actions, supported by credentials, conform to policies. Just as a database manager coordinates the input and storage of data and processes queries, a trust manager coordinates the collection and storage of policies and credentials and processes requests for trust decisions. We refer to the processing of such a request as "evaluating compliance with a policy."
In current Web applications, the prototypical credential is a PICS label [RM], which states some properties of an Internet resource (e.g., executable code has been virus-checked). An important idea of [BFL] that we use in this work is that of "programmable credentials." Rather than simply making unconditional statements, programmable credentials can examine statements made by other credentials and fetch information from the network before deciding which statements to make. For example, a credential may examine existing statements, ask GoodMouseClicking whether the authors of those statements are reliable, and then decide whether the statements are trustworthy.
In its simplest form, a policy sets rules about which credentials must be present in order to permit an action. In the course of deciding whether a requested action conforms to a policy, however, it is often necessary to perform potentially dangerous operations. In particular, it may be useful to fetch credentials over the network. For example, if one wants to know a particular reviewer's opinion about a video clip before deciding whether to watch it, it will be necessary to consult a server that distributes that reviewer's opinions. One danger is that information will leak out unintentionally during the fetching process. Another danger is that spoofed credentials may be retrieved. Yet a third danger is that, since credentials are programs, running credentials retrieved over the network exposes us to the full gamut of risks from running unknown programs.
Because we are interested in managing trust, rather than in eliminating danger, we permit these dangerous actions but put them under policy control. Policies state when to fetch credentials. Policies also determine which statements must be made about a credential before it is safe to run it. For example, credentials written in some (safe) programming languages may always be permitted to execute, while credentials written in other languages may be executed only if vouched for by some trusted party. Finally, policies determine whether and how credentials are to be authenticated before the statements they create are deemed to be trustworthy. For example, some kinds of statements may be used only if the credentials were signed using a particular cryptographic key.
Our trust management system is called REFEREE. The name is an acronym: Rule-controlled Environment For Evaluation of Rules, and Everything Else. It is an environment for evaluating compliance with policies (rules), but the evaluation process itself may involve dangerous actions and hence is under policy control. The "Everything Else" refers to credentials, whose evaluation (execution) also needs to be under policy control. In placing everything under policy control, REFEREE differs from PolicyMaker, the trust management system described in [BFL]. In particular, PolicyMaker does not permit policies to control credential-fetching or signature-verification; it assumes that the calling application has gathered all of the relevant credentials and verified all digital signatures before calling the trust management system.
Within the World Wide Web Consortium, the PICS Working Group and Digital Signature Initiative are experimenting with REFEREE as a possible common platform for trust management in content selection and digital signature applications. Yang-hua Chu has implemented an early design of REFEREE as part of his masters' thesis research, and this paper reflects that early design.
We begin by presenting the REFEREE calling conventions for invocable programs (both policies and credentials). Next, we describe a simple language, called the profiles-0.92 language, for writing policies and describe several other programs, including one that fetches PICS labels and converts them into REFEREE's internal statement format and one that verifies cryptographic hashes. Third, we present sample policies, expressed as REFEREE programs. This is followed by an execution trace of a sample policy that retrieves a set of PICS labels that are sufficient to authorize the requested action. The execution trace is taken from a working policy evaluator that can be accessed and exercised on the Web. Finally, we give a conclusion.
There are three primitive data types in REFEREE:
A tri-value is one of true, false, or unknown. A statement list is a collection of assertions expressed in a particular format, described later. Each program takes an initial statement list as an input and may also take additional arguments. A program may invoke another program during the course of its execution.
Intuitively, a policy governing a particular action is a program that returns true or false, depending on whether the available statements are sufficient to infer compliance or non-compliance with a policy, or returns unknown if no inference can be made.
Intuitively, a credential is a program that examines the initial statements passed to it and derives additional statements. This generalizes the usual notion of a credential as directly supplying statements: The new statements supplied by a credential may be conditional on the initial statements or other environmental factors, such as the amount of space available on the local hard disk.
Actually, REFEREE allows both policies and credentials to return both tri-values and statement lists. It is useful for policies to return a justification, which can be expressed as a list of statements, along with a tri-value answer. For example, a policy may reject downloading of code and provide statements indicating whether (a) the code is known to be malicious, or (b) the local machine is currently too heavily loaded to permit downloads. It is also useful for credential programs to indicate whether the execution was successful (a tri-value) in addition to returning a list of statements. Thus, in REFEREE, every program returns both a tri-value and a list of statements. However, we will continue to observe the distinction between policies and credentials in this paper, for purposes of exposition.
Applications running on a Web server, a proxy server, or a personal computer may invoke REFEREE. When an application program invokes REFEREE, it provides a database of available programs, provides an initial statement list (that may be empty), designates a particular program (policy) to run, and optionally provides additional arguments to the designated program.
Notions of "true" and "false" are familiar from Boolean logic. When asking, however, about authorization of a particular action (for example, "Should the following purchase order be approved?"), there are typically three possible outcomes:
In the third case, the value returned by the trust management system is neither "true" nor "false" but "unknown," for the policy that was in force during the evaluation was not able to make a determination about the requested action. It is up to the application calling the trust management system to decide what action (if any) should be taken when the trust management system returns "unknown."
An alternative approach using only Boolean values would be to extend the definition of "false" to include requests with insufficient credentials to make a trust management decision. That is, an answer of "false" from the system would indicate "the action may not be taken either because sufficient credentials exist to deny the action or because sufficient credentials could not be found either to permit or to deny the action." Notice, however, that this solution intrinsically biases the trust management system against affirming questions asked of it, which may force users to ask questions in twisted forms to gain the desired mode of operation. (Note that this bias is often considered appropriate, particularly in "high security" applications; because many Web applications do not fit easily into traditional "high security paradigms," we have chosen to avoid this bias in REFEREE. For a more thorough discussion of the difficulties caused by allowing the trust management system to return a value of "unknown," see [BFRS, Section 4].) Further, it may be counter-productive to hide the fact that a decision could not be reached under the current policy from calling applications, especially when the policy is invoked as a subprogram of another policy, which may have alternative policies for dealing with a lack of credentials.
A REFEREE statement is a two-element structure consisting of some content and a context for that content. The context and the content of a statement are each arbitrary s-expressions; the context determines how the content is to be interpreted, and the interpretation of the context itself is subject to agreement between the calling application and REFEREE. Statement lists are simply unordered lists of REFEREE statements.
The ability for one policy to call another policy is central to REFEREE for two reasons. First, policies in general often defer judgment on some point to other policies: Bob may choose to allow his children to view any Web page that Alice allows her children to view. Second, evaluation of a particular request may require dangerous activity (such as network access), and invocations allow such dangerous actions to be executed from within REFEREE policies. Thus dangerous activity is controlled by policy, one aspect of REFEREE's central tenet of "everything is under policy control."
All programs that can be invoked by a REFEREE program must conform to the REFEREE calling conventions. The required input to a program is a statement list defining the current evaluation context; programs may also accept additional arguments (either required or optional). The output of an invocation is a REFEREE expression value: a tri-value and a statement list. Typically, a program will append returned statements to one of its own statement lists.
Note that, once a REFEREE program invokes another program, control of the REFEREE engine is transferred to that program until it chooses to exit. Thus, invocation is inherently dangerous, because the invoking program has no way to monitor or interrupt execution of the invoked program. It is important, therefore, to reason carefully about whether it is acceptable to invoke a program before actually doing so.
The REFEREE environment is extensible: It permits addition of new programs, as long as they conform to the calling conventions. Thus, if a new cryptographic hash function is defined, a new hash-checking program can be added, without reworking other components of a policy. Programs can even be downloaded and installed dynamically during execution. Once a callable program is downloaded over the Web, there is a trust management decision that must be made: whether the controlling REFEREE policy should allow the downloaded module to be invoked. REFEREE requires that a program explicitly install the invocable program into the database of named programs before it can be called. Thus, the addition of a new, callable program to REFEREE is controlled by the currently running policy.
Installations are not persistent across multiple calls to REFEREE
unless the calling application explicitly takes action to make them
so. That is, the calling application would need to record the new
program and pass it in as part of the initial program database in
future calls to REFEREE. Within an execution of REFEREE,
installations have dynamic scope; a program can by default only
install new functionality for itself and other programs it calls, not
the programs that called it. Particular programs are free to
override this default within their own scope and make installations
effectively have global scope.
A profiles-0.92 program can invoke the load-labels program to look for PICS labels, either embedded in documents or retrieved over the network from a label bureau. Once found, the labels are parsed and written as REFEREE statements, which are returned.
Profiles-0.92 provides tri-value generalizations of the Boolean operators AND, OR, and NOT. For example, (AND true false) evaluates to false, but (AND true unknown) evaluates to unknown. In addition, the operators true-if-unknown and false-if-unknown coerce tri-values into conventional Boolean values.
Finally, profiles-0.92 provides a pattern-matcher that examines the statement list for statements of a particular form.
The next section illustrates features of the language.
We now present example policies written for REFEREE and explained in English. They illustrate the following three features of REFEREE:
Some of the following examples use a hypothetical PICS rating service called "musac," with two dimensions, "sax" and "violins" (abbreviated "s" and "v" in PICS labels), and values 0, 1, and 2 along each dimension. Other examples use hypothetical rating services "http://www.e-trust.org/privacy-descriptions" and "http://w3.org/privacy" whose dimensions and values will be explained as needed. Throughout this section, we use the policy language "profiles-0.92" at the top level.
We are worried about excessive use of saxophones in music distributed over the Internet. We trust publishers and all others to declare honestly the number of saxophones used; we want to check this number before browsing the URL.
(invoke "load-label" STATEMENT-LIST URL "http://www.musac.org/" (EMBEDDED)) (false-if-unknown (match (("load-label" *) (* ((version "PICS-1.1") * (service "http://www.musac.org/") * (ratings (RESTRICT < s 2))))) STATEMENT-LIST))
This policy has two steps. First, we invoke load-label
to find and download labels for the given URL; any labels found
will be put on the statement list. We then run a pattern-matcher
over the now-modified statement list, looking for any label using
the rating service from "http://www.musac.org/
"
and with an s rating less than 2. If the matcher finds no musac
label with an s dimension, it returns unknown,
and, if it finds such a label, it returns true or
false depending on whether or not the associated value
is less than 2.
The line false-if-unknown
has the effect of
converting a returned value unknown to false;
this is a policy decision about which
semantics to give to three-valued logic, specifically about the
meaning of unknown. The overall effect is to allow viewing
of any document for which we can find at least a single label with a musac-s
rating less than 2.
The following examples will build on this policy template.
(invoke "load-label" STATEMENT-LIST URL "http://www.musac.org/" (EMBEDDED)) (false-if-unknown (match (("load-label" *) (* ((version "PICS-1.1") * (service "http://www.musac.org/") * (ratings (RESTRICT <! s 2))))) STATEMENT-LIST))
This policy is almost identical to Sample Policy 1 above, except that the restriction operator within the pattern matcher is "<!" instead of "<". The "!"-ending restriction operators require every matching statement that is tested against the operator to satisfy the operator. The effect is that all labels from all sources that indicate a sax level must indicate a low sax level. Thus a user can choose this policy instead of the last, depending on how the user wants to resolve simultaneous reception of a label from Alice saying musac-s level 1 and a label from Bob saying musac-s level 2.
An alternative way to handle conflicting labels is to specify the rater(s) we recognize. For example, the following variant tells the matcher to insist on labels from Alice:
(invoke "load-label" STATEMENT-LIST URL "http://www.musac.org/" (EMBEDDED)) (false-if-unknown (match (("load-label" *) (* ((version "PICS-1.1") * (service "http://www.musac.org/") * (by "mailto:alice") (ratings (RESTRICT < s 2))))) STATEMENT-LIST))
This time we are not worried about the content of URLs but instead about what a remote host will do with information we submit. Therefore we consult PICS labels in rating services that rate URLs according to the site's treatment of private information submitted by users. In the following, a value less than 2 in the "data-exchange" dimension of "http://www.e-trust.org/privacy-descriptions" indicates that the remote host gives no user-submitted data to anyone else. A value of 0 in the "personal-data-collected" dimension of "http://w3.org/privacy" indicates that no information at all is retained.
(invoke "load-label" STATEMENT-LIST URL "http://www.e-trust.org/privacy-descriptions" ("http://labels.com")) (invoke "load-label" STATEMENT-LIST URL "http://w3.org/privacy" ("http://labels.com")) (false-if-unknown (and (match (("load-label" *) (* ((version "PICS-1.1") * (service "http://www.e-trust.org/privacy-descriptions") * (ratings (RESTRICT < data-exchange 2))))) STATEMENT-LIST) (match (("load-label" *) (* ((version "PICS-1.1") * (service "http://w3.org/privacy") * (ratings (RESTRICT = personal-data-collected 0))))) STATEMENT-LIST)))
This policy uses labels from two services. In the first step,
we load labels for URL
by invoking
"load-label
"
twice, once for each rating service; "load-label
"
adds statements to the statement-list. We then search the returned
statements for labels using two rating services, E-Trust and w3.org's
privacy service.
Each pattern-match uses criteria specific to one rating service,
and then the results of those two pattern-matches are combined
using and
. Thus, in order for the policy to be satisfied,
there must be labels in both rating services.
In the previous examples, the requested document was downloaded and scanned for embedded labels, which would be used to decide whether or not to display the document. In a privacy application, what is at stake is our private information that could be passed to the remote host, including the fact that we accessed the site at all. For this reason, the user here has decided not to scan the document for labels (which would involve connecting to the remote site), but only to request labels separately from the document (from the bureau "http://labels.com," which the user trusts for this purpose). Using this policy, we won't even connect to the originally-requested remote site unless we've first decided that it is safe.
The alternate in sample policy 2 explicitly trusted a single rater of content, Alice. A more likely situation is that we would trust a single auditor (or a small number of auditors) and accept only labels from raters unknown to us but endorsed by the auditor. In this example, we assume that the user trusts GoodMouseClicking to endorse raters. The user sets a policy of trusting reviews from those reviewers for which GoodMouseClicking vouches.
(invoke "load-label" STATEMENT-LIST URL "http://www.musac.org/v1.0" ("http://labels.com/")) (invoke "endorse-label" STATEMENT-LIST "mailto:GoodMouseClicking@w3.org" ("http://labels.com/")) (false-if-unknown (match (("endorse-label" *) (* "mailto:GoodMouseClicking@w3.org" * ((version "PICS-1.1") * (service "http://www.musac.org/v1.0") * (ratings * (RESTRICT < v 2) * ))))) STATEMENT-LIST))
The module endorse-label
is a separate program that
handles requests for deferral of trust. It takes a rater and a
label bureau as arguments and contacts the label bureau to request
labels from the specified rater that vouch for the author of each
of the statements on STATEMENT-LIST. When GoodMouseClicking is
found to vouch for a statement's author, GoodMouseClicking's identifier
is added to the beginning of that statement, and the new statement
is returned, to be added to the caller's STATEMENT-LIST. As in the previous
examples, the match expression then searches the statement
list, in this case for a statement added by the endorse-label
program that begins with "mailto:GoodMouseClicking@w3.org."
The same principle can be used to insist on signed labels, in
case we are worried about forgeries. Instead of invoking
These examples illustrate three key features of the referee system.
First, we saw in sample policy 2 how REFEREE can process and resolve
conflicting information from multiple sources, by indicating whether
all labels must agree or the existence of a single label of
the desired type carries the decision. In sample 3, we saw that
the very process of deciding when a URL is acceptable may involve
similar trust decisions; REFEREE puts the entire process under
policy control. Finally, in sample 4, we saw how REFEREE can easily
adapt to new cryptographic algorithms and new paradigms for security
(deferral of trust).
The policy used in this section extends sample policy 4 of the
previous section to include checking of hash functions. Here we emphasize
the way different modules interact with each other as well as the data flow.
Below is the policy:
The module
onto its local copy of
Now
The presence of "check-hash" in the context of the statement
indicates the hash verification. Now
Again, the string "endorse-label" is added to the context
of this statement to indicate that the rater of this PICS label
statement is approved by
Finally,
The returned values say the action should be taken (tri-value
is true), and it is justified by the rater-endorsed, hash-checked
PICS label in the statement-list. They are returned to the caller
application (such as a browser), and it interprets the action appropriately
(e.g., by displaying the URL on the screen).
The Web will benefit greatly from a common platform for trust management,
because different organizations will be able to develop component programs.
REFEREE is a promising candidate platform: Its calling conventions impose
minimal requirements on component programs while ensuring that they
interoperate. As new safety features are desired, they can be added as
installable programs, without rewriting all the other features.
[BFRS] M. Blaze, J. Feigenbaum, P. Resnick, and M. Strauss,
"Managing Trust in an Information-Labeling System,"
to appear in European Transactions on Telecommunications.
Available as AT&T Technical Report 96.15.1 and from
http://www.research.att.com/~presnick/papers/bfrs/.
[N] G. Necula, "Proof-Carrying Code," to appear in
Proceedings of the 1997 ACM Symposium on Principles of Programming
Languages.
[NL] G. Necula and P. Lee, "Safe Kernel Extensions without
Run-time Checking," in Proceedings of the 1996 Usenix Symposium
on Operating System Design and Implementation, pp. 229-243.
[RM] P. Resnick and J. Miller, "PICS: Internet Access Controls
without Censorship," Communications of the ACM, 39 (1996),
pp. 87-93. Also available as
http://www.w3.org/pub/WWW/PICS/iacwcv2.htm.
The PICS Working Group homepage is http://www.w3.org/PICS/. The
Digital Signature Initiative homepage is
http://www.w3.org/pub/WWW/Security/DSig/.
Homepages for the authors' organizations are http://web.mit.edu/, http://www.w3.org/ and http://www.research.att.com/.
Send email to the authors at
yhchu@mit.edu,
{jf, bal, presnick, mstrauss}@research.att.com.
endorse-labels
,
we could invoke a module that checks a digital signature or performs
other types of cryptographic checks.
5. An Execution Trace
We present below an execution trace extracted from a working REFEREE
demo. An on-line version of this demo is available.
(invoke "load-label" STATEMENT-LIST URL
"http://www.musac.org/v1.0" ("http://labels.com/"))
(invoke "check-hash" STATEMENT-LIST)
(invoke "endorse-label" STATEMENT-LIST
"mailto:GoodMouseClicking@w3.org" ("http://labels.com/"))
(false-if-unknown (match (("endorse-label" "check-hash" *)
(* "mailto:GoodMouseClicking@w3.org" *
((version "PICS-1.1") *
(service "http://www.musac.org/v1.0") *
(ratings * (RESTRICT < v 2) * ))))
STATEMENT-LIST))
There are four modules used here: profiles-0.92
,
load-label
, check-hash
and
endorse-label
. The profiles-0.92
module is
the top-level module called by the REFEREE invoker to interpret the
policy as described above, the check-hash
module
verifies hash values in PICS labels, and the load-label
and endorse-label
modules are explained in the previous
Section. When the caller invokes REFEREE with this policy and the URL
http://www.w3.org/pub/WWW/Overview.html
of interest,
profiles-0.92
first invokes load-label
. Now
assume load-label
actually gets one label from the label
bureau http://labels.com
and returns the following to
profiles-0.92
:
tri-value = true
statement-list = ((()
(("load-label" "http://www.w3.org/pub/WWW/Overview.html"
"http://labels.com/")
((version "PICS-1.1")
(service "http://www.musac.org/v1.0")
(original
(PICS-1.1 "http://www.musac.org/v1.0"
labels by "alice@rater.org"
md5 "7A2B1a2bA72BxyzyplehJQ=="
ratings (s 1 v 0)))
(by "alice@rater.org")
(md5 "7A2B1a2bA72BxyzyplehJQ==")
(ratings (s 1) (v 0))))))
load-label
returns true, because a label is
found. The statement list
contains a single statement describing the PICS label. The context of
the statement is empty, because it is produced by
the module itself. The caller profiles-0.92
records
this statement by prepending the name of the called module,
"load-label," onto each context and appending the result
statement-list = ((("load-label")
(("load-label" "http://www.w3.org/pub/WWW/Overview.html"
"http://labels.com/")
((version "PICS-1.1")
(service "http://www.musac.org/v1.0")
(original (PICS-1.1 ...))
(by "alice@rater.org")
(md5 "7A2B1a2bA72BxyzyplehJQ==")
(ratings (s 1) (v 0))))))
STATEMENT-LIST
.
profiles-0.92
proceeds to the second line to check
MD5 with the parsed statement above. The module check-hash
is passed the above statement-list and, assuming the hash is good,
returns
tri-value = true
and the same statement list it was passed. The caller,
profiles-0.92,
prepends "check-hash" onto each context and appends
the following statement to its copy of STATEMENT-LIST
:
statement-list = ((("check-hash" "load-label")
(("load-label" "http://www.w3.org/pub/WWW/Overview.html"
"http://labels.com/")
((version "PICS-1.1")
(service "http://www.musac.org/v1.0")
(original (PICS-1.1 ...))
(by "alice@rater.org")
(md5 "7A2B1a2bA72BxyzyplehJQ==")
(ratings (s 1) (v 0))))))
profiles-0.92
proceeds to the third line, invoking the module
endorse-label
to check for an endorsement. Assuming the
endorsing label is found, endorse-label
returns a statement-list that gets "endorse-label" prepended
to the context, resulting in the following:
tri-value = true
statement-list =
((("endorse-label" "check-hash" "load-label")
("mailto:GoodMouseClicking@w3.org"
(("load-label" "http://www.w3.org/pub/WWW/Overview.html"
"http://labels.com/")
((version "PICS-1.1")
(service "http://www.musac.org/v1.0")
(original (PICS-1.1 ...))
(by "alice@rater.org")
(md5 "7A2B1a2bA72BxyzyplehJQ==")
(ratings (s 1) (v 0)))))))
endorse-label
policy. The passed
content is wrapped in an expression containing
"mailto:GoodMouseClicking@w3.org" (the name of the endorser).
profiles-0.92
proceeds to the last line to check
ratings. The match looks for a context with both "endorse-label"
and "check-hash" -- if either is missing, the match fails.
Because the
match succeeds, profiles-0.92
returns to the application
a tri-value of true and a statement-list of the statements
produced by the last form, the match:
tri-value = true
statement-list =
((("endorse-label" "check-hash" "load-label")
("mailto:GoodMouseClicking@w3.org"
(("load-label" "http://www.w3.org/pub/WWW/Overview.html"
"http://labels.com/")
((version "PICS-1.1")
(service "http://www.musac.org/v1.0")
(original (PICS-1.1 ...))
(by "alice@rater.org")
(md5 "7A2B1a2bA72BxyzyplehJQ==")
(ratings (s 1) (v 0)))))))
5.1 Execution Trace -- Summary
This execution trace demonstrates that a typical decision about viewing a
URL may involve (at least) the tasks of
Users may want to customize their policies for these tasks
individually, and REFEREE allows a user to express each policy in a
separate module. The modules communicate via a common API that
consists of passing statements in the convenient context-content
format and returning both a true/false/unknown result and a
justification in the form of additional statements.
6. Conclusion
The most important feature of REFEREE is that it places all dangerous
operations under policy control, rather than making arbitrary decisions to
accept certain dangers and avoid others. For example, it might seem natural
to avoid the danger of spoofed labels by requiring that the authenticity of
all labels be verified by checking digital signatures. The likelihood of
spoofed labels and their negative consequences, however, depend on the
context. REFEREE makes it possible to write a policy that requires signature
checking, one that does not, or one that does only in certain
circumstances.
Acknowledgment
We thank Jonathan Brezin of IBM, Mary Fernandez and Kathleen Fisher
of AT&T, and Rohit Khare and Jim Miller of W3C for helpful
discussion on the early development of the Profiles language and the
REFEREE system.
References
[BFL] M. Blaze, J. Feigenbaum, and J. Lacy, "Decentralized
Trust Management," in Proceedings of the 1996 IEEE Symposium
on Security and Privacy, pp. 164-173. Also available as a DIMACS
Technical Report from
ftp://dimacs.rutgers.edu/pub/dimacs/TechnicalReports/TechReports/1996/96-17.ps.gz.
URLs
A working policy evaluator can be found online in
http://www.w3.org/pub/WWW/PICS/TrustMgt/demo/Overview.html.
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