The rising popularity of Web 2.0 applications has seen an increase in the volume of user-generated content. Web Applications allow users to define policies that specify how they wish their content to be accessed. In large Web 2.0 applica- tions these policies can become quite complex, with users having to make decisions such as ’who can access my image library?’, or ’should my mobile number be made available to 3rd party agencies?’. As the policy size grows, the ability for every- day users to comprehend and manage their policy diminishes. This paper presents a model of policy configuration that harnesses the power of the Internet community by presenting average-sets of policy configuration. These policy ”profiles” allow users to select a default set of policy values that line up with the average case, as presented by the application population. Policies can be promoted at an application level or at a group level. An XML approach is presented for representing the policy profiles. The approach allows for easy profile comparison and merging. A storage mecha- nism is also presented that describes how these policies should be made persistent in a distributed data storage system.
History
Source title
Software Engineering, Artificial Intelligence, Networking and Parallel/Distributed Computing 2011
Pagination
103-112
Series details
Studies in Computational Intelligence-368
Editors
Lee, R.
Publisher
Springer
Place published
Heidelberg, Germany
Language
en, English
College/Research Centre
Faculty of Engineering and Built Environment
School
School of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science
Rights statement
The final publication is available at www.springerlink.com