Trustworthy Global Computing 7th International Symposium, TGC 2012, Newcastle upon Tyne, UK, September 7-8, 2012, Revised Selected Papers / [electronic resource] :
edited by Catuscia Palamidessi, Mark D. Ryan.
- X, 213 p. 37 illus. online resource.
- Lecture Notes in Computer Science, 8191 0302-9743 ; .
- Lecture Notes in Computer Science, 8191 .
From Rational Number Reconstruction to Set Reconciliation and File Synchronization -- Affine Refinement Types for Authentication and Authorization -- Seamless Distributed Computing from the Geometry of Interaction -- A Beginner's Guide to the DeadLock Analysis Model -- Formal Modeling and Reasoning about the Android Security Framework -- A Type System for Flexible Role Assignment in Multiparty Communicating Systems -- A Multiparty Multi-session Logic -- LTS Semantics for Compensation-Based Processes -- Linking Unlinkability -- Towards Quantitative Analysis of Opacity -- An Algebra for Symbolic Diffie-Hellman Protocol Analysis -- Security Analysis in Probabilistic Distributed Protocols via Bounded Reachability -- Modular Reasoning about Differential Privacy in a Probabilistic Process Calculus.
This book constitutes the thoroughly refereed post-conference proceedings of the 7th International Symposium on Trustworthy Global Computing, TGC 2012, held in Newcastle upon Tyne, UK, in September 2012. The 9 revised full papers presented together with 3 invited talks were carefully reviewed and selected from 14 submissions. The papers cover a wide range of topics in the area of global computing and reliable computation in the so-called global computers, i.e., those computational abstractions emerging in large-scale infrastructures such as service-oriented architectures, autonomic systems and cloud computing, providing frameworks, tools, algorithms and protocols for designing open-ended, large-scale applications and for reasoning about their behavior and properties in a rigorous way.
9783642411571
10.1007/978-3-642-41157-1 doi
Computer science. Computer communication systems. Software engineering. Data encryption (Computer science). Coding theory. Algorithms. Management information systems. Computer Science. Data Encryption. Computer Communication Networks. Management of Computing and Information Systems. Algorithm Analysis and Problem Complexity. Software Engineering. Coding and Information Theory.