DocumentCode
2274276
Title
If A1 is the answer, what was the question? An Edgy Naif´s retrospective on promulgating the trusted computer systems evaluation criteria
Author
Schaefer, Marvin
fYear
2004
fDate
6-10 Dec. 2004
Firstpage
204
Lastpage
228
Abstract
This paper provides an introspective retrospective on the history and development of the United States Department of Defense Trusted Computer System Evaluation Criteria (TCSEC). Known to many as the Orange Book, the TCSEC contained a distillation of what many researchers considered to be the soundest proven principles and practices for achieving graded degrees of sensitive information protection on multiuser computing systems. While its seven stated evaluation classes were explicitly directed to standalone computer systems, many of its authors contended that its principles would stand as adequate guidance for the design, implementation, assurance, evaluation and certification of other classes of computing applications including database management systems and networks. The account is a personal reminiscence of the author, and concludes with a subjective assessment of the TCSEC´s validity in the face of its successor evaluation criteria.
Keywords
computer evaluation; database management systems; security of data; time-sharing systems; database management systems; information protection; multiuser computing systems; standalone computer systems; trusted computer systems evaluation criteria; Application software; Books; Computer networks; Computer security; Government; History; Mathematics; Personnel; Protection; US Department of Defense;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Computer Security Applications Conference, 2004. 20th Annual
ISSN
1063-9527
Print_ISBN
0-7695-2252-1
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/CSAC.2004.22
Filename
1377230
Link To Document