Another Word For It Patrick Durusau on Topic Maps and Semantic Diversity

March 30, 2013

Permission Resolution with Neo4j – Part 1

Filed under: Cybersecurity,Graphs,Neo4j,Networks,Security — Patrick Durusau @ 2:17 pm

Permission Resolution with Neo4j – Part 1 by Max De Marzi.

From the post:

People produce a lot of content. Messages, text files, spreadsheets, presentations, reports, financials, etc, the list goes on. Usually organizations want to have a repository of all this content centralized somewhere (just in case a laptop breaks, gets lost or stolen for example). This leads to some kind of grouping and permission structure. You don’t want employees seeing each other’s HR records, unless they work for HR, same for Payroll, or unreleased quarterly numbers, etc. As this data grows it no longer becomes easy to simply navigate and a search engine is required to make sense of it all.

But what if your search engine returns 1000 results for a query and the user doing the search is supposed to only have access to see 4 things? How do you handle this? Check the user permissions on each file realtime? Slow. Pre-calculate all document permissions for a user on login? Slow and what if new documents are created or permissions change between logins? Does the system scale at 1M documents, 10M documents, 100M documents?

Search is one example of a need to restrict viewing results but browsing raises the same issues. Or display of information along side other information.

As I recall, Netware 4.1 (other versions as well no doubt) had the capability for a sysadmin to create sub-sysadmins, say for accounting or HR, that could hide information from the sysadmin. That was prior to search being commonly available.

What other security for search result schemes are out there?

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