Proactive Resilience Revisited: Resisting Intrusions means more than Byzantine Fault Tolerance
- đ¤ Speaker: Paulo Verissimo - University of Lisbon
- đ Date & Time: Friday 26 March 2010, 13:30 - 14:30
- đ Venue: Small public lecture room, Microsoft Research Ltd, 7 J J Thomson Avenue (Off Madingley Road), Cambridge
Abstract
Abstract: Byzantine Fault/Intrusion Tolerance has become a reference paradigm for dealing with faults and intrusions, achieving security (and dependability) in an automatic way, much along the lines of classical fault tolerance. However, there are issues specific to malicious faults (attacks and intrusions) that bring about some problems and limitations to the paradigm as a basis for designing resilient systems, some of which quite unexpected. We wish to discuss the limitations of some theoretical underpinnings of Byzantine Fault/Intrusion Tolerance in distributed systems, and report on some research results evaluating some of those limitations.
Series This talk is part of the Microsoft Research Cambridge, public talks series.
Included in Lists
- All Talks (aka the CURE list)
- bld31
- Cambridge Centre for Data-Driven Discovery (C2D3)
- Cambridge talks
- Chris Davis' list
- Guy Emerson's list
- Interested Talks
- Microsoft Research Cambridge, public talks
- ndk22's list
- ob366-ai4er
- Optics for the Cloud
- personal list
- PMRFPS's
- rp587
- School of Technology
- Small public lecture room, Microsoft Research Ltd, 7 J J Thomson Avenue (Off Madingley Road), Cambridge
- Trust & Technology Initiative - interesting events
- yk449
Note: Ex-directory lists are not shown.
![[Talks.cam]](/static/images/talkslogosmall.gif)

Paulo Verissimo - University of Lisbon
Friday 26 March 2010, 13:30-14:30