Computer security model

A computer security model is a scheme for specifying and enforcing security policies. A security model may be founded upon a formal model of access rights, a model of computation, a model of distributed computing, or no particular theoretical grounding at all. A computer security model is implemented through a computer security policy.

For a more complete list of available articles on specific security models, see Category:Computer security models.

Selected topics

gollark: They are 32 bits.
gollark: It makes the parsing much easier and less evil.
gollark: Yep!
gollark: I feel kind of bad about `MOVI`/`LOAD`, the two actually-useful instructions I have, both having some unused space in the, er, instruction, because they only use one register.
gollark: Better *why*?

References

  • Krutz, Ronald L. and Vines, Russell Dean, The CISSP Prep Guide; Gold Edition, Wiley Publishing, Inc., Indianapolis, Indiana, 2003.
  • CISSP Boot Camp Student Guide, Book 1 (v.082807), Vigilar, Inc.
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