Nonrepudiation
Nonrepudiation prevents either sender or receiver from denying
a transmitted message. Thus, when a message is sent, the receiver can prove that
the alleged sender in fact sent the message. Similarly, when a message is
received, the sender can prove that the alleged receiver in fact received the
message.
Availability Service
Both X.800 and RFC 2828 define availability to be the property
of a system or a system resource being accessible and usable upon demand by an
authorized system entity, according to performance specifications for the system
(i.e., a system is available if it provides services according to the system
design whenever users request them). A variety of attacks can result in the loss
of or reduction in availability. Some of these attacks are amenable to automated
countermeasures, such as authentication and encryption, whereas others require
some sort of physical action to prevent or recover from loss of availability of
elements of a distributed system.
X.800 treats availability as a property to be associated with
various security services. However, it makes sense to call out specifically an
availability service. An
availability service is one that protects a system to ensure its availability.
This service addresses the security concerns raised by denial-of-service
attacks. It depends on proper management and control of system resources and
thus depends on access control service and other security services.
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