A group of application security vendors affiliated with the Organization for the Advancement of Structured Information Standards (OASIS) will next week announce a proposal for an XML standard for application vulnerabilities. The announcement will be made at the RSA Conference being held in San Francisco.. . .. A group of application security vendors affiliated with the Organization for the Advancement of Structured Information Standards (OASIS) will next week announce a proposal for an XML standard for application vulnerabilities. The announcement will be made at the RSA Conference being held in San Francisco. The group, made up of Citadel Security Software, GuardedNet, NetContinuum, SPI Dynamics and Teros, is promoting the development of the Application Vulnerability Description Language (AVDL), which is intended to standardize information about application vulnerabilities, enabling different products to share vulnerability information in a heterogenous network environment, according to a statement released by the five companies. The AVDL group submitted its idea to OASIS for study. In turn, OASIS has created a technical committee to develop an XML definition for exchanging information on the security vulnerabilities of applications exposed to networks. The link for this article located at NW Fusion is no longer available. . During the RSA Conference, a coalition of cybersecurity firms unveils a new XML framework aimed at standardizing the reporting of software flaws.. Application Vulnerabilities,OASIS Standard,XML Security,AVDL Proposal,Network Security. . Anthony Pell
When a standard is deployed as openly as XML, businesses are bound to have security concerns. The need to control content's distribution and ensure its integrity keeps many companies from deploying XML without an extranet. Proposed standards will address security . . . . When a standard is deployed as openly as XML, businesses are bound to have security concerns. The need to control content's distribution and ensure its integrity keeps many companies from deploying XML without an extranet. Proposed standards will address security issues, and these standards are being further developed to allow for granular control over XML content. This article introduces and explains five proposed XML standards that deal with security issues. Besides being able to use standard methods of encryption when transmitting XML documents, the W3C and IETF propose a standard for encrypting the XML data and tags within a document. This would let you encrypt portions of a document, with the idea that only sensitive information needs to be protected. Encrypting portions of a document with different keys would allow you to distribute the same XML document to various recipients, but the recipients would only be able to decrypt the parts relevant to them. The link for this article located at ZDNet is no longer available. . When a standard is deployed as openly as XML, businesses are bound to have security concerns. The ne. standard, deployed, openly, businesses, bound, security, concerns. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
Two separate initiatives led by Netegrity Inc. and Securant Technologies Inc. are looking to develop an XML standard for moving security information--including authentication, authorization and user profiles--across disparate online trading systems.. . .. Two separate initiatives led by Netegrity Inc. and Securant Technologies Inc. are looking to develop an XML standard for moving security information--including authentication, authorization and user profiles--across disparate online trading systems. The goals of Netegrity's Security Services Markup Language, or S2ML, and Securant's AuthXML initiative are similar: to allow customers to move across multiple online exchanges and other e-business systems using a single sign-on and without having to create multiple profiles. Having a standard security language would enable businesses to more quickly create trading relationships and would improve customer loyalty, speed billing cycles and allow businesses to remain in control of online transactions. The link for this article located at ZDNet is no longer available. . Two separate initiatives led by Netegrity Inc. and Securant Technologies Inc. are looking to develop. separate, initiatives, netegrity, securant, technologies, looking, develop. . Anthony Pell
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