%0 Conference Proceedings %T HiPoLDS: A Security Policy Language for Distributed Systems %+ Eurecom [Sophia Antipolis] %+ SAP Research %A Dell’amico, Matteo %A Serme, Gabriel %A Idrees, Muhammad, Sabir %A Santana de Olivera, Anderson %A Roudier, Yves %Z Part 6: Policy and Access Control %< avec comité de lecture %( Lecture Notes in Computer Science %B 6th International Workshop on Information Security Theory and Practice (WISTP) %C Egham, United Kingdom %Y Ioannis Askoxylakis %Y Henrich C. Pöhls %Y Joachim Posegga %I Springer %3 Information Security Theory and Practice. Security, Privacy and Trust in Computing Systems and Ambient Intelligent Ecosystems %V LNCS-7322 %P 97-112 %8 2012-06-20 %D 2012 %R 10.1007/978-3-642-30955-7_10 %Z Computer Science [cs]Conference papers %X Expressing security policies to govern distributed systems is a complex and error-prone task. Policies are hard to understand, often expressed with unfriendly syntax, making it difficult to security administrators and to business analysts to create intelligible specifications. We introduce the Hierarchical Policy Language for Distributed Systems (HiPoLDS ). HiPoLDS has been designed to enable the specification of security policies in distributed systems in a concise, readable, and extensible way. HiPoLDS’s design focuses on decentralized execution environments under the control of multiple stakeholders. Policy enforcement employs distributed reference monitors who control the flow of information between services. HiPoLDS allows the definition of both abstract and concrete policies, expressing respectively high-level properties required and concrete implementation details to be ultimately introduced into the service implementation. %G English %Z TC 11 %Z WG 11.2 %2 https://inria.hal.science/hal-01534303/document %2 https://inria.hal.science/hal-01534303/file/978-3-642-30955-7_10_Chapter.pdf %L hal-01534303 %U https://inria.hal.science/hal-01534303 %~ EURECOM %~ IFIP-LNCS %~ IFIP %~ IFIP-TC %~ IFIP-TC11 %~ IFIP-WISTP %~ IFIP-WG11-2 %~ IFIP-LNCS-7322