Network Security Mechanisms Utilizing Dynamic Network Address Translation LDRD Project
Author(s) -
Carrie Price,
ERIC STANTON,
Erik Lee,
John Michalski,
KUAN CHUA,
Y. W. Wong,
C.J. Kenneth Tan
Publication year - 2002
Publication title -
osti oai (u.s. department of energy office of scientific and technical information)
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Reports
DOI - 10.2172/806701
Subject(s) - computer science , adversarial system , compromise , dynamic network analysis , protocol (science) , translation (biology) , computer security , data science , artificial intelligence , computer network , social science , sociology , medicine , biochemistry , chemistry , alternative medicine , pathology , messenger rna , gene
A new protocol technology is just starting to emerge from the laboratory environment. Its stated purpose is to provide an additional means in which networks, and the services that reside on them, can be protected from adversarial compromise. This report has a two-fold objective. First is to provide the reader with an overview of this emerging Dynamic Defenses technology using Dynamic Network Address Translation (Dynat). This ''structure overview'' is concentrated in the body of the report, and describes the important attributes of the technology. The second objective is to provide a framework that can be used to help in the classification and assessment of the different types of dynamic defense technologies along with some related capabilities and limitations. This information is primarily contained in the appendices
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