TY - THES A1 - Ringelstein, Christoph T1 - Data Provenance and Destiny in Distributed Environments N2 - Modern Internet and Intranet techniques, such as Web services and virtualization, facilitate the distributed processing of data providing improved flexibility. The gain in flexibility also incurs disadvantages. Integrated workflows forward and distribute data between departments and across organizations. The data may be affected by privacy laws, contracts, or intellectual property rights. Under such circumstances of flexible cooperations between organizations, accounting for the processing of data and restricting actions performed on the data may be legally and contractually required. In the Internet and Intranet, monitoring mechanisms provide means for observing and auditing the processing of data, while policy languages constitute a mechanism for specifying restrictions and obligations. In this thesis, we present our contributions to these fields by providing improvements for auditing and restricting the data processing in distributed environments. We define formal qualities of auditing methods used in distributed environments. Based on these qualities, we provide a novel monitoring solution supporting a data-centric view on the distributed data processing. We present a solution for provenance-aware policies and a formal specification of obligations offering a procedure to decide whether obligatory processing steps can be met in the future. KW - Policy Language KW - Provenance KW - Destiny KW - Distributed Environments KW - Auditing Y1 - 2012 UR - https://kola.opus.hbz-nrw.de/frontdoor/index/index/docId/591 UR - https://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:hbz:kob7-7337 ER -