DocumentCode
2350942
Title
Preventing Sybil Attacks by Privilege Attenuation: A Design Principle for Social Network Systems
Author
Fong, Philip W L
Author_Institution
Dept. of Comput. Sci., Univ. of Calgary, Calgary, AB, Canada
fYear
2011
fDate
22-25 May 2011
Firstpage
263
Lastpage
278
Abstract
In Face book-style Social Network Systems (FSNSs), which are a generalization of the access control model of Face book, an access control policy specifies a graph-theoretic relationship between the resource owner and resource access or that must hold in the social graph in order for access to be granted. Pseudonymous identities may collude to alter the topology of the social graph and gain access that would otherwise be forbidden. We formalize Denning´s Principle of Privilege Attenuation (POPA) as a run-time property, and demonstrate that it is a necessary and sufficient condition for preventing the above form of Sybil attacks. A static policy analysis is then devised for verifying that an FSNS is POPA compliant (and thus Sybil free). The static analysis is proven to be both sound and complete. We also extend our analysis to cover a peculiar feature of FSNS, namely, what Fong et al. dubbed as Stage-I Authorization. We discuss the anomalies resulted from this extension, and point out the need to redesign Stage-I Authorization to support a rational POPA-compliance analysis.
Keywords
authorisation; graph theory; program diagnostics; social networking (online); Facebook; POPA-compliance analysis; Sybil attack prevention; access control model; gain access; graph-theoretic relationship; principle of privilege attenuation; social graph; social network systems; stage-I authorization; static policy analysis; Authorization; Facebook; Topology; Vocabulary; Principle of Privilege Attenuation; Sybil attacks; access control; completeness of static analysis; social network systems; soundness;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Security and Privacy (SP), 2011 IEEE Symposium on
Conference_Location
Berkeley, CA
ISSN
1081-6011
Print_ISBN
978-1-4577-0147-4
Electronic_ISBN
1081-6011
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/SP.2011.16
Filename
5958034
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