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This paper gives necessary foundations to understand the mechanism of warning processing and summarizes the state of the art in warning development. That includes a description of tools, researchers use to work in this scientific field. In detail these are models that describes the human way of processing warnings and mental models. Both are presented detailed with relevant examples. The paper tells how these tools are connected and how they are used to improve the effectiveness of warnings.
Less is Often More: Header Whitelisting as Semantic Gap Mitigation in HTTP-Based Software Systems
(2021)
The web is the most wide-spread digital system in the world and is used for many crucial applications. This makes web application security extremely important and, although there are already many security measures, new vulnerabilities are constantly being discovered. One reason for some of the recent discoveries lies in the presence of intermediate systems—e.g. caches, message routers, and load balancers—on the way between a client and a web application server. The implementations of such intermediaries may interpret HTTP messages differently, which leads to a semantically different understanding of the same message. This so-called semantic gap can cause weaknesses in the entire HTTP message processing chain.
In this paper we introduce the header whitelisting (HWL) approach to address the semantic gap in HTTP message processing pipelines. The basic idea is to normalize and reduce an HTTP request header to the minimum required fields using a whitelist before processing it in an intermediary or on the server, and then restore the original request for the next hop. Our results show that HWL can avoid misinterpretations of HTTP messages in the different components and thus prevent many attacks rooted in a semantic gap including request smuggling, cache poisoning, and authentication bypass.
Is It Really You Who Forgot the Password? When Account Recovery Meets Risk-Based Authentication
(2024)
Das Auslesen von Messdaten in elektronischer Form ermöglicht es, diese vom Ursprung bis zur Rechnungsstellung effizient und ohne Medienbruch zu erheben und zu verarbeiten. Gerade im liberalisierten Energiemarkt ist dies von Bedeutung, da eine Vielzahl von Marktteilnehmern miteinander kommunizieren muss. Das im VERNET-Programm geförderte SELMA-Projekt verfolgt das Ziel, einen Standard für den sicheren elektronischen Austausch von Messdaten zu entwickeln und zu etablieren. Eine der zentralen Anforderungen ist die Gewährleistung der Authentizität und Integrität der über offene Netze ausgelesenen Messdaten, die über die gesamte Lebensdauer der Messdaten nachprüfbar sein sollen. Die technische Umsetzung dieser Anforderungen resultiert in einer Sicherheitsarchitektur, die durch den durchgängigen Einsatz elektronischer Signaturen gekennzeichnet ist. Mit den signierten Datensätzen können die Rechnungen von den Marktteilnehmern auf ihre Authentizität und Integrität hin überprüft werden. Dieser Beitrag zeigt die gesetzgeberischen Hindernisse auf, die bei der Umsetzung der Anforderungen an qualifizierte Signaturen im elektronischen Messdatenaustausch auftreten und wie dennoch eine größtmögliche Beweiskraft für fortgeschrittene Signaturen erreicht werden kann.
This work introduces Grid computing, showsits use in eHealth environments and elicits trends towards the integration of custodians in eHealth Grids. It considers security and privacy requirements for the use of Grid computing in eHealth scenariosand discusses the possible integration of different types of data custodians. Finally the paper concludes and gives an outlook on the development and deployment of eHealth Gridsinthe near future.
Usable Security und Privacy
(2010)
We present a systematization of usable security principles, guidelines and patterns to facilitate the transfer of existing knowledge to researchers and practitioners. Based on a literature review, we extracted 23 principles, 11 guidelines and 47 patterns for usable security and identified their interconnection. The results indicate that current research tends to focus on only a subset of important principles. The fact that some principles are not yet addressed by any design patterns suggests that further work on refining these patterns is needed. We developed an online repository, which stores the harmonized principles, guidelines and patterns. The tool enables users to search for relevant guidance and explore it in an interactive and programmatic manner. We argue that both the insights presented in this article and the web-based repository will be highly valuable for students to get a good overview, practitioners to implement usable security and researchers to identify areas of future research.
Listen to Developers! A Participatory Design Study on Security Warnings for Cryptographic APIs
(2020)
Application Programming Interfaces (APIs) are a vital link between software components as well as between software and developers. Security APIs deliver crucial functionalities for programmers who see themselves in the increasing need for integrating security services into their software products. The ignorant or incorrect use of Security APIs leads to critical security flaws, as has been revealed by recent security studies. One major reason for this is rooted in usability issues. API Usability research has been deriving recommendations for designing usable APIs in general. Facing the growing relevance of Security APIs, the question arises, whether the observed usability aspects in the general space are already sufficient enough for building usable Security APIs. The currently available findings in the API Usability domain are selective fragments only, though. This still emerging field has not produced a comprehensive model yet. As a consequence, a first contribution of this paper is such a model that provides a consolidated view on the current research coverage of API Usability. On this baseline, the paper continues by conducting an analysis of relevant security studies, which give insights on usability problems developers had, when using Security APIs. This analysis leads to a proposal of eleven specific usability characteristics relevant for Security APIs. These have to be followed up by usability studies in order to evaluate how Security APIs need to be designed in a usable way and which potential trade-offs have to be balanced.
Computer-Sicherheitswarnungen – Benutzerzentrierte Entwurfsansätze der Usable Security-Forschung
(2017)
Der dritte und letzte Teil der Artikel-Serie in dieser Ausgabe zum Thema Usable Security zeigt exemplarisch, wie Softwareentwickler mit den im Rahmen des USecureD-Projekts entwickelten Werkzeugen arbeiten können. Der Beitrag konzentriert sich dabei auf Prinzipien, Richtlinien und Patterns, die bei der Ausgestaltung gebrauchstauglicher Computer-Sicherheitswarnungen berücksichtigt werden sollten. Anhand dieser sehr ubiquitären Bestandteile eines jeden digitalen Produkts kann anschaulich gezeigt werden, wie aktuelle wissenschaftliche Erkenntnisse auf dem Gebiet der Usable Security praxisnah für Softwarearchitekturen und Programmierer verfügbar und anwendbar gemacht werden können.
Dieses Buch führt Sie umfassend in die WebSocket-Technik und die damit einhergehenden neuen Entwicklungsmöglichkeiten ein. Unter den zahlreichen exemplarischen Anwendungen finden sich Beispiele auf Basis von Node.js, Vert.x, und JSR 356, als Programmiersprachen werden Java und JavaScript eingesetzt.
SOA-Readiness of REST
(2014)
Service Security Revisited
(2014)
Web of Services Security
(2015)