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Difference between revisions of "OWASP Robot Security Project"
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− | + | The OWASP Robotic Security Project is meant to create bottom up driven robot security standards applied globally. It includes robot identification, registration, change of registration, robot termination (and other robot security - we need to flesh this out). | |
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− | + | With the advent of both virtual and physical robots, the number being created will shortly grow from millions to billions. They can and will easily cross existing nation state borders. The robots' actions will have legal implications ranging from contracts and operations through to personal interactions with people and/or other robots. This results in potential civil and criminal liabilities. Thus there is a need to legally register the identities of the robots, in a manner such that all jurisdictions are involved. | |
− | + | The potential aspect of malicious people, organizations or states taking advantage of a robot must be addressed. This ranges from identity, consent, data to potential operation of the robot. It also must include cloud based security for the robot. Thus, global security best practices need to be developed regarding robotic security. | |
− | + | This project is results driven. Thus, it starts with robot creation through to termination, generating practical code and business practice security which industry can readily adopt with new laws and regulations referencing them. | |
− | + | Since technology changes very quickly, the security principles and best practices also needs to be designed to rapidly change. Thus, the robot security project is creating a framework with which to then rapidly change as and when required. | |
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+ | '''We invite interested parties to join us!''' | ||
==Licensing== | ==Licensing== |
Revision as of 20:55, 20 March 2019
The OWASP Robotic Security PrinciplesThe OWASP Robotic Security Project has the following principles: I, Guy Huntington, have listed these principles below to get the discussion going. They aren't yet written in stone! Identification:
Registration:
Change of Registration:
Robotic Termination:
Other Robot Security Principles: We need to insert here a detailed list of other robot security principles. These should detail out virtual and physical security principles for robots DescriptionThe OWASP Robotic Security Project is meant to create bottom up driven robot security standards applied globally. It includes robot identification, registration, change of registration, robot termination (and other robot security - we need to flesh this out). With the advent of both virtual and physical robots, the number being created will shortly grow from millions to billions. They can and will easily cross existing nation state borders. The robots' actions will have legal implications ranging from contracts and operations through to personal interactions with people and/or other robots. This results in potential civil and criminal liabilities. Thus there is a need to legally register the identities of the robots, in a manner such that all jurisdictions are involved. The potential aspect of malicious people, organizations or states taking advantage of a robot must be addressed. This ranges from identity, consent, data to potential operation of the robot. It also must include cloud based security for the robot. Thus, global security best practices need to be developed regarding robotic security. This project is results driven. Thus, it starts with robot creation through to termination, generating practical code and business practice security which industry can readily adopt with new laws and regulations referencing them. Since technology changes very quickly, the security principles and best practices also needs to be designed to rapidly change. Thus, the robot security project is creating a framework with which to then rapidly change as and when required. We invite interested parties to join us! LicensingA project must be licensed under a community friendly or open source license. For more information on OWASP recommended licenses, please see OWASP Licenses. While OWASP does not promote any particular license over another, the vast majority of projects have chosen a Creative Commons license variant for documentation projects, or a GNU General Public License variant for tools and code projects. The OWASP Security Principles are free to use. In fact it is encouraged!!! Additionally, I also encourage you to contribute back to the project. I have no monopoly on this knowledge; however, we all have pieces of this knowledge from our experience. Let's begin by putting our individual pieces together to make something great. Great things happen when people work together. The OWASP Security Principles are licensed under the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/ Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 license], so you can copy, distribute and transmit the work, and you can adapt it, and use it commercially, but all provided that you attribute the work and if you alter, transform, or build upon this work, you may distribute the resulting work only under the same or similar license to this one. |
What is OWASP Security Principles Project?Here you should add a short description of what your project actually does. What is the primary goal of your project, and why is it important? The end goal is to identify, cite, and document the fundamental principles of information security. Once this is well organised, I think it would be great to publish this through the OWASP Press. Of course, it will always remain freely available, and any money collected will go directly into the project to absorb costs with any remaining funds going to the OWASP Foundation. This document should serve as a guide to technical architects and designers outlining the fundamental principles of security. PresentationThis is where you can link to slide presentations related to your project.
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The OWASP Security Principles project is developed by a worldwide team of volunteers. A live update of project contributors is found here.
The first contributors to the project were:
Define Robot's Security Area
- define a robot
- define robot's security layer
- define attack surface
- define attack vector
- make threat modeling
Make a Security Guideline(interface, communication, authentication, etc)
- define countermeasures of attack vector
- define robot's identification spec. and methods
- guideline for robot hardware/sensor development
- guideline for external interface of robot
- guideline for software development
- guideline for robot OS
- guideline for robot's communication/transport layer
- guideline for robot's (dynamic) authentication
- guideline for robot's cloud layer
This page is where you need to place your legacy project template page if your project was created before October 2013. To edit this page you will need to edit your project information template. You can typically find this page by following this address and substituting your project name where it says "OWASP_Example_Project". When in doubt, ask the OWASP Projects Manager. Example template page: https://www.owasp.org/index.php/Projects/OWASP_Example_Project
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