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Conference

International Conference on Web Services 

About: International Conference on Web Services is an academic conference. The conference publishes majorly in the area(s): Web service & WS-Policy. Over the lifetime, 2188 publications have been published by the conference receiving 47531 citations.


Papers
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Proceedings ArticleDOI
Eric Yuan1, J. Tong1
11 Jul 2005
TL;DR: The paper describes the ABAC model in terms of its authorization architecture and policy formulation, and makes a detailed comparison between ABAC and traditional role-based models, which clearly shows the advantages of ABAC.
Abstract: For companies and government agencies alike, the emergence of Web services technologies and the evolution of distributed systems toward service oriented architectures (SOA) have helped promote collaboration and information sharing by breaking down "stove-piped" systems and connecting them via loosely coupled, interoperable system-to-system interfaces. Such architectures, however, also bring about their own security challenges that require due consideration. Unfortunately, the current information security mechanisms are insufficient to address these challenges. In particular, the access control models today are mostly static and coarsely grained; they are not well-suited for the service-oriented environments where information access is dynamic and ad-hoc in nature. This paper outlines the access control challenges for Web services and SOA, and proposes an attribute based access control (ABAC) model as a new approach, which is based on subject, object, and environment attributes and supports both mandatory and discretionary access control needs. The paper describes the ABAC model in terms of its authorization architecture and policy formulation, and makes a detailed comparison between ABAC and traditional role-based models, which clearly shows the advantages of ABAC. The paper then describes how this new model can be applied to securing Web service invocations, with an implementation based on standard protocols and open-source tools. The paper concludes with a summary of the ABAC model's benefits and some future directions.

712 citations

Proceedings ArticleDOI
Lingshuang Shao1, Jing Zhang1, Yong Wei1, Junfeng Zhao1, Bing Xie1, Hong Mei1 
09 Jul 2007
TL;DR: Experimental results demonstrate that a collaborative filtering based approach to making similarity mining and prediction from consumers' experiences can make significant improvement on the effectiveness of QoS prediction for web services.
Abstract: Many researchers propose that, not only functional but also non-functional properties, also known as quality of service (QoS), should be taken into consideration when consumers select services. Consumers need to make prediction on quality of unused web services before selecting. Usually, this prediction is based on other consumers' experiences. Being aware of different QoS experiences of consumers, this paper proposes a collaborative filtering based approach to making similarity mining and prediction from consumers' experiences. Experimental results demonstrate that this approach can make significant improvement on the effectiveness of QoS prediction for web services.

443 citations

Proceedings Article
01 Jan 2003
TL;DR: This work discusses one such approach that involves adding semantics to WSDL using DAML+OIL+OIL ontologies and uses UDDI to store these semantic annotations and search for Web services based on them.
Abstract: With the increasing growth in popularity of Web services, discovery of relevant Web services becomes a significant challenge. One approach is to develop semantic Web services where by the Web services are annotated based on shared ontologies, and use these annotations for semantics-based discovery of relevant Web services. We discuss one such approach that involves adding semantics to WSDL using DAML+OIL ontologies. Our approach also uses UDDI to store these semantic annotations and search for Web services based on them. We compare our approach with another initiative to add semantics to support Web service discovery, and show how our approach may fit current standards-based industry approach better.

442 citations

Proceedings ArticleDOI
06 Jul 2009
TL;DR: The comprehensive experimental analysis shows that WSRec achieves better prediction accuracy than other approaches, and includes a user-contribution mechanism for Web service QoS information collection and an effective and novel hybrid collaborative filtering algorithm for Web Service QoS value prediction.
Abstract: As the abundance of Web services on the World Wide Web increase,designing effective approaches for Web service selection and recommendation has become more and more important. In this paper, we present WSRec, a Web service recommender system, to attack this crucial problem. WSRec includes a user-contribution mechanism for Web service QoS information collection and an effective and novel hybrid collaborative filtering algorithm for Web service QoS value prediction. WSRec is implemented by Java language and deployed to the real-world environment. To study the prediction performance, A total of 21,197 public Web services are obtained from the Internet and a large-scale real-world experiment is conducted, where more than 1.5 millions test results are collected from 150 service users in different countries on 100 publicly available Web services located all over the world. The comprehensive experimental analysis shows that WSRec achieves better prediction accuracy than other approaches.

436 citations

Book ChapterDOI
08 Sep 2006
TL;DR: DecSerFlow as mentioned in this paper is a declarative service flow language that can be used to specify, enact, and monitor service flows, and it can be extendible (i.e., constructs can be added without changing the engine or semantical basis) to enforce or to check the conformance of service flows.
Abstract: The need for process support in the context of web services has triggered the development of many languages, systems, and standards. Industry has been developing software solutions and proposing standards such as BPEL, while researchers have been advocating the use of formal methods such as Petri nets and π-calculus. The languages developed for service flows, i.e., process specification languages for web services, have adopted many concepts from classical workflow management systems. As a result, these languages are rather procedural and this does not fit well with the autonomous nature of services. Therefore, we propose DecSerFlow as a Declarative Service Flow Language. DecSerFlow can be used to specify, enact, and monitor service flows. The language is extendible (i.e., constructs can be added without changing the engine or semantical basis) and can be used to enforce or to check the conformance of service flows. Although the language has an appealing graphical representation, it is grounded in temporal logic.

386 citations

Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Conference in previous years
YearPapers
202211
202188
202084
201982
201890
2017126