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Scope of the Journal The journal Annals of Pure and Applied Logic publishes high quality papers in all areas of mathematical logic as well as applications of logic in mathematics, in theoretical computer science and in other related disciplines. All submissions to the journal should be mathematically correct, well written (preferably in English)and contain relevant new results that are of significant interest to a substantial number of logicians. The journal also considers submissions that are somewhat too long to be published by other journals while being too short to form a separate memoir provided that they are of particular outstanding quality and broad interest. In addition, Annals of Pure and Applied Logic occasionally publishes special issues of selected papers from well-chosen conferences in pure and applied logic.
Please see our Guide for Authors for information on article submission. This journal has an Open Archive. All published items, including research articles, have unrestricted access and will remain permanently free to read and download 48 months after publication. All papers in the Archive are subject to Elsevier's user license.
All submissions to the journal should be mathematically correct, well written (preferably in English) and contain relevant new results that are of significant interest to a substantial number of logicians. The journal also considers submissions that are somewhat too long to be published by other journals while being too short to form a separate memoir provided that they are of particular outstanding quality and broad interest. In addition, Annals of Pure and Applied Logic occasionally publishes Special Issues of selected papers from well-chosen conferences in pure and applied logic.
Published by the American Mathematical Society, the Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society (BULL) is devoted to research articles of the highest quality in all areas of pure and applied mathematics.
N2 - This thesis investigates the use of a free, open sourceUNIX-based operating system in providing security featuresto a financially sensitive business function such as a treasury.We start by examining some of the main security features(such as the pf firewall and systrace policies) which are included with the operating system, how they work and how such features can be used within a financial environment. We then examine possible problems with each feature and the introduction of such a feature into the business environment. We also explore some of the criticism thatOpenBSD has received and additional features which couldbe useful to business.We then look at some examples of statutory and regulatoryrequirements, and how OpenBSD's features may be mapped toaddress such requirements. As part of this we examine howopen source software in general can be utilised and someof the advantages and disadvantages of it against similarcommercial offerings.We then see a case study based on a real-world treasury,and some of the serious security concerns which are facedby security officers responsible for such departments. Weexplore how OpenBSD can be applied within an infrastructureto provide key security services and address some of the specific concerns raised in the treasury security assessment.Finally, we provide conclusions and suggestions for futurework.
AB - This thesis investigates the use of a free, open sourceUNIX-based operating system in providing security featuresto a financially sensitive business function such as a treasury.We start by examining some of the main security features(such as the pf firewall and systrace policies) which are included with the operating system, how they work and how such features can be used within a financial environment. We then examine possible problems with each feature and the introduction of such a feature into the business environment. We also explore some of the criticism thatOpenBSD has received and additional features which couldbe useful to business.We then look at some examples of statutory and regulatoryrequirements, and how OpenBSD's features may be mapped toaddress such requirements. As part of this we examine howopen source software in general can be utilised and someof the advantages and disadvantages of it against similarcommercial offerings.We then see a case study based on a real-world treasury,and some of the serious security concerns which are facedby security officers responsible for such departments. Weexplore how OpenBSD can be applied within an infrastructureto provide key security services and address some of the specific concerns raised in the treasury security assessment.Finally, we provide conclusions and suggestions for futurework. 2b1af7f3a8