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Phyllis Frankl Phones & Addresses

  • 185 Prospect Park SW APT 507, Brooklyn, NY 11218 (718) 436-0516
  • 185 Prospect Park SW, Brooklyn, NY 11218
  • 185 Prospect Park SW APT 507, Brooklyn, NY 11218

Publications

Us Patents

System And Method For Service Discovery In A Computer Network Using Dynamic Proxy And Data Dissemination

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US Patent:
20090222530, Sep 3, 2009
Filed:
Aug 23, 2006
Appl. No.:
11/990414
Inventors:
John Buford - Lawrenceville NJ, US
Emre Celebi - Brooklyn NY, US
Phyllis Frankl - Brooklyn NY, US
Keith Ross - Brooklyn NY, US
Gregory Perkins - Pennington NJ, US
Assignee:
MATSUSHITA ELECTRIC INDUSTRIAL CO., LTD. - Osaka
International Classification:
G06F 15/16
US Classification:
709217
Abstract:
A service advertisement delivery system and method is useful in a data processing network. A broadcasting node receives service advertisements describing services offered by service providing network nodes. A datastore in communication with the broadcasting node stores a set of the service advertisements of the service providing network nodes. The broadcasting node broadcasts the set of service advertisements over a broadcast channel to service seeking network nodes receiving the advertisements over the broadcast channel.

Complementary Character Encoding For Preventing Input Injection In Web Applications

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US Patent:
8615804, Dec 24, 2013
Filed:
Feb 18, 2011
Appl. No.:
13/030657
Inventors:
Raymond Mui - New York NY, US
Phyllis Frankl - Brooklyn NY, US
Assignee:
Polytechnic Institute of New York University - Brooklyn NY
International Classification:
G06F 21/00
US Classification:
726 23, 717154
Abstract:
Method to prevent the effect of web application injection attacks, such as SQL injection and cross-site scripting (XSS), which are major threats to the security of the Internet. Method using complementary character coding, a new approach to character level dynamic tainting, which allows efficient and precise taint propagation across the boundaries of server components, and also between servers and clients over HTTP. In this approach, each character has two encodings, which can be used to distinguish trusted and untrusted data. Small modifications to the lexical analyzers in components such as the application code interpreter, the database management system, and (optionally) the web browser allow them to become complement aware components, capable of using this alternative character coding scheme to enforce security policies aimed at preventing injection attacks, while continuing to function normally in other respects. This approach overcomes some weaknesses of previous dynamic tainting approaches by offering a precise protection against persistent cross-site scripting attacks, as taint information is maintained when data is passed to a database and later retrieved by the application program. The technique is effective on a group of vulnerable benchmarks and has low overhead.
Phyllis G Frankl from Brooklyn, NY, age ~67 Get Report