TY - BOOK AU - Palamidessi,Catuscia AU - Ryan,Mark D. ED - SpringerLink (Online service) TI - Trustworthy Global Computing: 7th International Symposium, TGC 2012, Newcastle upon Tyne, UK, September 7-8, 2012, Revised Selected Papers T2 - Lecture Notes in Computer Science, SN - 9783642411571 AV - QA76.9.A25 U1 - 005.82 23 PY - 2013/// CY - Berlin, Heidelberg PB - Springer Berlin Heidelberg, Imprint: Springer KW - Computer science KW - Computer Communication Networks KW - Software engineering KW - Data encryption (Computer science) KW - Coding theory KW - Computer software KW - Information Systems KW - Computer Science KW - Data Encryption KW - Management of Computing and Information Systems KW - Algorithm Analysis and Problem Complexity KW - Software Engineering KW - Coding and Information Theory N1 - From Rational Number Reconstruction to Set Reconciliation and File Synchronization -- Affine Refinement Types for Authentication and Authorization -- Seamless Distributed Computing from the Geometry of Interaction -- A Beginner’s Guide to the DeadLock Analysis Model -- Formal Modeling and Reasoning about the Android Security Framework -- A Type System for Flexible Role Assignment in Multiparty Communicating Systems -- A Multiparty Multi-session Logic -- LTS Semantics for Compensation-Based Processes -- Linking Unlinkability -- Towards Quantitative Analysis of Opacity -- An Algebra for Symbolic Diffie-Hellman Protocol Analysis -- Security Analysis in Probabilistic Distributed Protocols via Bounded Reachability -- Modular Reasoning about Differential Privacy in a Probabilistic Process Calculus N2 - This book constitutes the thoroughly refereed post-conference proceedings of the 7th International Symposium on Trustworthy Global Computing, TGC 2012, held in Newcastle upon Tyne, UK, in September 2012. The 9 revised full papers presented together with 3 invited talks were carefully reviewed and selected from 14 submissions. The papers cover a wide range of topics in the area of global computing and reliable computation in the so-called global computers, i.e., those computational abstractions emerging in large-scale infrastructures such as service-oriented architectures, autonomic systems and cloud computing, providing frameworks, tools, algorithms and protocols for designing open-ended, large-scale applications and for reasoning about their behavior and properties in a rigorous way UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-41157-1 ER -