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ERCIMDL
2004
Springer

Towards a Policy Language for Humans and Computers

14 years 5 months ago
Towards a Policy Language for Humans and Computers
Abstract. A policy is a statement that an action is permitted or forbidden if certain conditions hold. We introduce a language for reasoning about policies called Rosetta. What makes Rosetta different from existing approaches is that its syntax is essentially a fragment of English. The language also has formal semantics, and we can prove whether a permission follows from a set of Rosetta policies in polynomial time. These features make it fairly easy for policy language developers to provide translations between their languages and ours. As a result, policy writers and (human) readers can create and access policies via the interface of their choice; these policies can be translated to Rosetta; and once in Rosetta can be translated to an appropriate language for enforcement.
Vicky Weissman, Carl Lagoze
Added 01 Jul 2010
Updated 01 Jul 2010
Type Conference
Year 2004
Where ERCIMDL
Authors Vicky Weissman, Carl Lagoze
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