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An architecture for enforcement of usage contracts in distributed multimedia systems
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Source IBM Centre for Advanced Studies Conference archive
Proceedings of the 1996 conference of the Centre for Advanced Studies on Collaborative research table of contents
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Page: 10  
Year of Publication: 1996
Author
David Evans  Department of Computer Science, University of Waterloo, Waterloo, Ontario, Canada N2L 3G1
Sponsors
CRSNG : Natural Sci and EngRch Council of Canada
IBM Canada : IBM Canada
NRC : National Research Council - Canada
Publisher
IBM Press 
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ABSTRACT

Current distributed multimedia systems, including the World Wide Web. allow users access to vast amounts of media-rich information. Much effort has been put into providing browsing and querying tools, storing multimedia documents efficiently, and transporting the documents from a server to a client. The multimedia data in these systems is often protected by copyright and has other restrictions on its use. However, current systems, such as the Web, have limited support for document security.When an authorised user obtains a document, its use is no longer under the scrutiny of the system--the document's provider has no control over how it is used. In this paper we present a system designed to extend the system's control over documents. It determines precisely what the user may and may not do after the document has been transferred to the user's client machine. The basis of the system is the notion of a contract that describes the operations users may perform on the document. This contract is enforced by a tool that is dynamically produced, sent to the client, and used by the user to manipulate the document.


REFERENCES

Note: OCR errors may be found in this Reference List extracted from the full text article. ACM has opted to expose the complete List rather than only correct and linked references.

 
1
{1} R. Velthuys, J. Wong, K. Lyons, G. von Bochmann, E. Dubois, N. Georganas, G. Neufeld, and T. Ozsu, "Enabling technologies for distributed multimedia applications." Working architecture paper for the CITR Broadband Services Major Project in Distributed Multimedia.
 
2
{2} J. Gehl and S. Douglas, "New york times web site," in Edupage, Educom, January 26 1996. See http://www.educom.edu/.


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