1 / 12

Data and Applications Security Developments and Directions

Data and Applications Security Developments and Directions. Dr. Bhavani Thuraisingham The University of Texas at Dallas Introduction to the Course January 8, 2006. Objective of the Unit.

ahanu
Download Presentation

Data and Applications Security Developments and Directions

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Data and Applications Security Developments and Directions Dr. Bhavani Thuraisingham The University of Texas at Dallas Introduction to the Course January 8, 2006

  2. Objective of the Unit • This unit provides an overview of the course. The course describes concepts, developments, challenges, and directions in data and applications security. Topics include • database security, distributed data management security, object security, data warehouse security, data mining for security applications, privacy, secure semantic web, secure digital libraries, secure knowledge management and secure sensor information management, biometrics

  3. Outline of the Unit • Outline of Course • Course Work • Course Rules • Contact • Appendix

  4. Outline of the Course • Unit #1: Introduction to Data and Applications • Part I: Background • Unit #2: Data Management • Unit #3: Information Security • Unit #4: Information Management • Part II: Discretionary Security • Unit #5: Concepts • Unit #6: Policy Enforcement • Part III: Mandatory Security • Unit #7: Concepts • Unit #8: Architectures

  5. Outline of the Course (Continued) • Part IV: Secure Relational Data Management • Unit #9: Data Model • Unit #10: Functions • Unit #11: Prototypes and Products • Part V: Inference Problem • Unit #12: Concepts • Unit #13: Constraint Processing • Unit #14: Conceptual Structures • Part VI: Secure Distributed Data Management • Unit #15: Secure Distributed data management • Unit #16: Secure Heterogeneous Data Integration • Unit #17: Secure Federated Data Management

  6. Outline of the Course (Continued) • Part VII: Secure Object Data Management • Unit #18: Secure Object Management • Unit #19: Secure Distributed Objects and Modeling Applications • Unit #20: Secure Multimedia Systems • Part VIII: Data Warehousing, Data Mining and Security • Unit #21: Secure Data Warehousing • Unit #22: Data Mining for Security Applications • Unit #23: Privacy • Part IX: Secure Information Management • Unit #24: Secure Digital Libraries • Unit #25: Secure Semantic Web • Unit #26: Secure Information and Knowledge Management

  7. Outline of the Course (Continued) • Part X: Emerging Technologies • Unit #27: Secure Dependable Data Management • Unit #28: Secure Sensor and Wireless Data Management • Unit #29: Other Emerging Technologies • Digital Forensics, Biometrics etc. • Unit #30 Conclusion to the Course • Guest Lectures

  8. Course Work • Two exams each worth 20 points • Mid-term and Final exams • Programming project worth 20 points • Due date; the day of the final exam • Four homework assignments worth 10 points each • Due dates will be announced • Total 100 points • Course Book: Database and Applications Security: Integration Data Management and Information Security, Bhavani Thuraisingham, CRC Press, 2005 • Term Paper (Optional for extra credit – 10 points)

  9. Project Report Format • Overview of the Project • Design of the System • Input/Output • Future Enhancements • References

  10. Some Project Topics • Query Modification on XML Documents • Access control for web systems • Intrusion detection system • Access control for multimedia systems • E.g., access control for image, video • Role-based access control system • Access control for object systems • Secure data warehouse

  11. Course Rules • Unless special permission is obtained from the instructor, each student will work incidviaully • Copying material from other sources will not be permitted unless the source is properly referenced • Any student who plagiarizes from other sources will be reported to the Computer Science department and any other committees as advices by the department

  12. Contact • For more information please contact • Dr. Bhavani Thuraisingham • Professor of Computer Science and • Director of Cyber Security Research Center Erik Jonsson School of Engineering and Computer Science EC31, The University of Texas at Dallas Richardson, TX 75080 • Phone: 972-883-4738 • Fax: 972-883-2399 • Email: bhavani.thuraisingham@utdallas.edu • http://www.utdallas.edu/~bxt043000/

More Related