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A Framework for Measuring the Costs of Security at Runtime

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNConference contribution/Paperpeer-review

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A Framework for Measuring the Costs of Security at Runtime. / Ivkic, Igor; Pichler, Harald; Zsilak, Mario et al.
CLOSER 2019 : International Conference on Cloud Computing and Services Science. 2019.

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNConference contribution/Paperpeer-review

Harvard

Ivkic, I, Pichler, H, Zsilak, M, Mauthe, A & Tauber, M 2019, A Framework for Measuring the Costs of Security at Runtime. in CLOSER 2019 : International Conference on Cloud Computing and Services Science. 9th International Conference on Cloud Computing and Services Science, CLOSER 2019, Heraklion, Greece, 2/05/19.

APA

Ivkic, I., Pichler, H., Zsilak, M., Mauthe, A., & Tauber, M. (2019). A Framework for Measuring the Costs of Security at Runtime. In CLOSER 2019 : International Conference on Cloud Computing and Services Science

Vancouver

Ivkic I, Pichler H, Zsilak M, Mauthe A, Tauber M. A Framework for Measuring the Costs of Security at Runtime. In CLOSER 2019 : International Conference on Cloud Computing and Services Science. 2019

Author

Ivkic, Igor ; Pichler, Harald ; Zsilak, Mario et al. / A Framework for Measuring the Costs of Security at Runtime. CLOSER 2019 : International Conference on Cloud Computing and Services Science. 2019.

Bibtex

@inproceedings{fe145e8466c14543bbd6fcd0718fc737,
title = "A Framework for Measuring the Costs of Security at Runtime",
abstract = "In Industry 4.0, Cyber-Physical Systems (CPS) are formed by components, which are interconnected with each other over the Internet of Things (IoT). The resulting capabilities of sensing and affecting the physical world offer a vast range of opportunities, yet, at the same time pose new security challenges. To address these challenges there are various IoT Frameworks, which offer solutions for managing and controlling IoT-components and their interactions. In this regard, providing security for an interaction usually requires performing additional security-related tasks (e.g. authorisation, encryption, etc.) to prevent possible security risks. Research currently focuses more on designing and developing these frameworks and does not satisfactorily provide methodologies for evaluating the resulting costs of providing security. In this paper we propose an initial approach for measuring the resulting costs of providing security for interacting IoT-components by using a Security Cost Modelling Framework. Furthermore, we describe the necessary building blocks of the framework and provide an experimental design showing how it could be used to measure security costs at runtime.",
keywords = "Cyber-Physical Systems, Internet of Things, Component Monitoring, Task Tracing, Security Cost Modelling",
author = "Igor Ivkic and Harald Pichler and Mario Zsilak and Andreas Mauthe and Markus Tauber",
year = "2019",
month = may,
language = "English",
booktitle = "CLOSER 2019 : International Conference on Cloud Computing and Services Science",
note = "9th International Conference on Cloud Computing and Services Science, CLOSER 2019, CLOSER 2019 ; Conference date: 02-05-2019 Through 04-05-2019",
url = "http://closer.scitevents.org/?y=2019 ",

}

RIS

TY - GEN

T1 - A Framework for Measuring the Costs of Security at Runtime

AU - Ivkic, Igor

AU - Pichler, Harald

AU - Zsilak, Mario

AU - Mauthe, Andreas

AU - Tauber, Markus

PY - 2019/5

Y1 - 2019/5

N2 - In Industry 4.0, Cyber-Physical Systems (CPS) are formed by components, which are interconnected with each other over the Internet of Things (IoT). The resulting capabilities of sensing and affecting the physical world offer a vast range of opportunities, yet, at the same time pose new security challenges. To address these challenges there are various IoT Frameworks, which offer solutions for managing and controlling IoT-components and their interactions. In this regard, providing security for an interaction usually requires performing additional security-related tasks (e.g. authorisation, encryption, etc.) to prevent possible security risks. Research currently focuses more on designing and developing these frameworks and does not satisfactorily provide methodologies for evaluating the resulting costs of providing security. In this paper we propose an initial approach for measuring the resulting costs of providing security for interacting IoT-components by using a Security Cost Modelling Framework. Furthermore, we describe the necessary building blocks of the framework and provide an experimental design showing how it could be used to measure security costs at runtime.

AB - In Industry 4.0, Cyber-Physical Systems (CPS) are formed by components, which are interconnected with each other over the Internet of Things (IoT). The resulting capabilities of sensing and affecting the physical world offer a vast range of opportunities, yet, at the same time pose new security challenges. To address these challenges there are various IoT Frameworks, which offer solutions for managing and controlling IoT-components and their interactions. In this regard, providing security for an interaction usually requires performing additional security-related tasks (e.g. authorisation, encryption, etc.) to prevent possible security risks. Research currently focuses more on designing and developing these frameworks and does not satisfactorily provide methodologies for evaluating the resulting costs of providing security. In this paper we propose an initial approach for measuring the resulting costs of providing security for interacting IoT-components by using a Security Cost Modelling Framework. Furthermore, we describe the necessary building blocks of the framework and provide an experimental design showing how it could be used to measure security costs at runtime.

KW - Cyber-Physical Systems

KW - Internet of Things

KW - Component Monitoring

KW - Task Tracing

KW - Security Cost Modelling

M3 - Conference contribution/Paper

BT - CLOSER 2019 : International Conference on Cloud Computing and Services Science

T2 - 9th International Conference on Cloud Computing and Services Science, CLOSER 2019

Y2 - 2 May 2019 through 4 May 2019

ER -