Abstract | ||
---|---|---|
We describe a framework for the secure sharing and aggregation of legacy data. The framework, \emph{sif} (for service-oriented interoperability framework), has two key principles at its core: that it should be possible to expose data from any legacy data source, irrespective of the underlying technologies or data models, and that data owners should be afforded the opportunity for expressive access control policies. sif abstracts issues such as secure transport and heterogeneous federation from application developers via a Java API. Our particular focus in this paper is sif's plug-in mechanism, which gives rise to a simple and elegant means of facilitating interoperability. |
Year | DOI | Venue |
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2009 | 10.1109/ITNG.2009.21 | ITNG |
Keywords | Field | DocType |
application developer,service-oriented interoperability framework,java api,legacy data,data owner,secure sharing,legacy data source,secure transport,sif abstracts issue,data model,authorisation,access control,data models,web server,web service,middleware,information technology,java,algorithm design and analysis,interoperability,dicom,application development,sun,web services,software maintenance,databases | Middleware,Data modeling,Algorithm design,Software engineering,Computer science,Computer security,Interoperability,Computer network,Access control,Software maintenance,Web service,Java | Conference |
Citations | PageRank | References |
1 | 0.35 | 5 |
Authors | ||
6 |
Name | Order | Citations | PageRank |
---|---|---|---|
Douglas Russell | 1 | 24 | 3.73 |
David Power | 2 | 124 | 16.71 |
Mark Slaymaker | 3 | 119 | 15.44 |
Ghita Kouadri Mostefaoui | 4 | 82 | 4.72 |
Xiaoqi Ma | 5 | 13 | 4.29 |
Andrew Simpson | 6 | 282 | 49.37 |