Access control is a recognized open issue when interacting with RDF using HTTP methods. In literature, authentication and authorization mechanisms either introduce undesired complexity such as SPARQL and ad-hoc policy languages, or rely on basic access control lists, thus resulting in limited policy expressiveness. This paper attempts to show how the Shi3ld attribute-based authorization framework for SPARQL endpoints has been progressively converted to protect HTTP operations on RDF.

URL: http://eswc-conferences.org/sites/default/files/papers2013/costabello.pdf
Keywords: Linked Data Platform, Access control, CRUD, SPARQL endpoint, Privacy Preference Ontology (PPO)
Author: Costabello, Luca
Date created: 2013-01-01 05:00:00.000
Language: http://id.loc.gov/vocabulary/iso639-2/eng
Time required: P30M
Educational use: professionalDevelopment
Educational audience: student
Interactivity type: expositive

  • Competencies