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2021-02-23
Cushing, R., Koning, R., Zhang, L., Laat, C. d, Grosso, P..  2020.  Auditable secure network overlays for multi-domain distributed applications. 2020 IFIP Networking Conference (Networking). :658—660.

The push for data sharing and data processing across organisational boundaries creates challenges at many levels of the software stack. Data sharing and processing rely on the participating parties agreeing on the permissible operations and expressing them into actionable contracts and policies. Converting these contracts and policies into a operational infrastructure is still a matter of research and therefore begs the question how should a digital data market place infrastructure look like? In this paper we investigate how communication fabric and applications can be tightly coupled into a multi-domain overlay network which enforces accountability. We prove our concepts with a prototype which shows how a simple workflow can run across organisational boundaries.

2017-06-05
Pan, Xiang, Yegneswaran, Vinod, Chen, Yan, Porras, Phillip, Shin, Seungwon.  2016.  HogMap: Using SDNs to Incentivize Collaborative Security Monitoring. Proceedings of the 2016 ACM International Workshop on Security in Software Defined Networks & Network Function Virtualization. :7–12.

Cyber Threat Intelligence (CTI) sharing facilitates a comprehensive understanding of adversary activity and enables enterprise networks to prioritize their cyber defense technologies. To that end, we introduce HogMap, a novel software-defined infrastructure that simplifies and incentivizes collaborative measurement and monitoring of cyber-threat activity. HogMap proposes to transform the cyber-threat monitoring landscape by integrating several novel SDN-enabled capabilities: (i) intelligent in-place filtering of malicious traffic, (ii) dynamic migration of interesting and extraordinary traffic and (iii) a software-defined marketplace where various parties can opportunistically subscribe to and publish cyber-threat intelligence services in a flexible manner. We present the architectural vision and summarize our preliminary experience in developing and operating an SDN-based HoneyGrid, which spans three enterprises and implements several of the enabling capabilities (e.g., traffic filtering, traffic forwarding and connection migration). We find that SDN technologies greatly simplify the design and deployment of such globally distributed and elastic HoneyGrids.