Diversity against Accidental and Deliberate Faults (1998)
| Venue: | Computer Security, Dependability, and Assurance: From Needs to Solutions |
| Citations: | 29 - 2 self |
BibTeX
@INPROCEEDINGS{Deswarte98diversityagainst,
author = {Yves Deswarte and Karama Kanoun and Jean-claude Laprie},
title = {Diversity against Accidental and Deliberate Faults},
booktitle = {Computer Security, Dependability, and Assurance: From Needs to Solutions},
year = {1998},
pages = {171--181},
publisher = {IEEE Press}
}
Years of Citing Articles
OpenURL
Abstract
The paper is aimed at examining the relationship between the three topics of the workshops that gave rise to this book: security, fault tolerance, and software assurance. Those three topics can be viewed as different facets of dependability. The paper focuses on diversity, as a desirable approach for addressing the classes of faults that underlay all these topics, i.e., design faults and intrusion faults. 1. Introduction The paper is aimed at examining the relationship between the three topics of the workshops that gave rise to this book: security, fault tolerance and software assurance. Those three topics can be viewed as different facets of dependability [29, 33], (see also the paper by Brian Randell in this volume). The second section is devoted to a fault classification, which identifies three major classes of faults: physical faults, design faults, (human-machine) interaction faults, where the latter two classes can be either accidental or deliberate. The classes of faults that ...







