Cyber Threat Intelligence (CTI) sharing has become a novel weapon in the arsenal of cyber defenders to proactively mitigate increasing cyber attacks. Automating the process of CTI sharing, and even the basic consumption, has raised new challenges for researchers and practitioners. This extensive literature survey explores the current state-of-the-art and approaches different problem areas of interest pertaining to the larger field of sharing cyber threat intelligence. The motivation for this research stems from the recent emergence of sharing cyber threat intelligence and the involved challenges of automating its processes. This work comprises a considerable amount of articles from academic and gray literature, and focuses on technical and non-technical challenges. Moreover, the findings reveal which topics were widely discussed, and hence considered relevant by the authors and cyber threat intelligence sharing communities.
This paper proposes a framework for monitoring the compliance of systems composed of web-services with requirements set for them. This framework assumes systems composed of web-services that are co-ordinated by a service composition process expressed in BPEL4WS and uses event calculus to specify the properties to be monitored. The monitorable properties may include behavioural properties of a system which are automatically extracted from the specification of its composition process in BPEL4WS and/or assumptions that system providers can specify in terms of events extracted from this specification.
This paper describes a framework supporting the runtime monitoring of requirements for systems implemented as compositions of web-services specified in BPEL. The requirements that can be monitored are specified in event calculus. The paper presents an overview of the framework and describes the architecture and implementation of a tool that we have developed to operationalise it. It also presents the results of a preliminary experimental evaluation of the framework.
This paper presents a framework for monitoring the compliance of systems composed of Web-services with requirements set for them at runtime. This framework assumes systems composed of Web-services which are co-coordinated by a service composition process expressed in BPEL and uses event calculus to specify the requirements to be monitored. These requirements may include behavioral properties of a system which are automatically extracted from the specification of its composition process in BPEL and/or assumptions that system providers can specify in terms of events extracted from this specification.
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