English

Formal Methods and CyberSecurity

Cryptography and Security 2019-09-10 v1 Software Engineering

Abstract

Formal methods have been largely thought of in the context of safety-critical systems, where they have achieved major acceptance. Tens of millions of people trust their lives every day to such systems, based on formal proofs rather than ``we haven't found a bug'' (yet!). Why is ``we haven't found a bug'' an acceptable basis for systems trusted with hundreds of millions of people's personal data? This paper looks at some of the issues in CyberSecurity, and the extent to which formal methods, ranging from ``fully verified'' to better tool support, could help. Alas The Royal Society (2016) only recommended formal methods in the limited context of ``safety critical applications'': we suggest this is too limited.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1909.03325,
  title  = {Formal Methods and CyberSecurity},
  author = {James H. Davenport},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1909.03325},
  year   = {2019}
}

Comments

To appear in "Short Papers FROM 2019"