609 research outputs found
Multidisciplinary perspectives on Artificial Intelligence and the law
This open access book presents an interdisciplinary, multi-authored, edited collection of chapters on Artificial Intelligence (‘AI’) and the Law. AI technology has come to play a central role in the modern data economy. Through a combination of increased computing power, the growing availability of data and the advancement of algorithms, AI has now become an umbrella term for some of the most transformational technological breakthroughs of this age. The importance of AI stems from both the opportunities that it offers and the challenges that it entails. While AI applications hold the promise of economic growth and efficiency gains, they also create significant risks and uncertainty. The potential and perils of AI have thus come to dominate modern discussions of technology and ethics – and although AI was initially allowed to largely develop without guidelines or rules, few would deny that the law is set to play a fundamental role in shaping the future of AI. As the debate over AI is far from over, the need for rigorous analysis has never been greater. This book thus brings together contributors from different fields and backgrounds to explore how the law might provide answers to some of the most pressing questions raised by AI. An outcome of the Católica Research Centre for the Future of Law and its interdisciplinary working group on Law and Artificial Intelligence, it includes contributions by leading scholars in the fields of technology, ethics and the law.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
LIPIcs, Volume 251, ITCS 2023, Complete Volume
LIPIcs, Volume 251, ITCS 2023, Complete Volum
The Politics of Platformization: Amsterdam Dialogues on Platform Theory
What is platformization and why is it a relevant category in the contemporary political landscape? How is it related to cybernetics and the history of computation? This book tries to answer such questions by engaging in multidisciplinary dialogues about the first ten years of the emerging fields of platform studies and platform theory. It deploys a narrative and playful approach that makes use of anecdotes, personal histories, etymologies, and futurable speculations to investigate both the fragmented genealogy that led to platformization and the organizational and economic trends that guide nowadays platform sociotechnical imaginaries
Measuring the impact of COVID-19 on hospital care pathways
Care pathways in hospitals around the world reported significant disruption during the recent COVID-19 pandemic but measuring the actual impact is more problematic. Process mining can be useful for hospital management to measure the conformance of real-life care to what might be considered normal operations. In this study, we aim to demonstrate that process mining can be used to investigate process changes associated with complex disruptive events. We studied perturbations to accident and emergency (A &E) and maternity pathways in a UK public hospital during the COVID-19 pandemic. Co-incidentally the hospital had implemented a Command Centre approach for patient-flow management affording an opportunity to study both the planned improvement and the disruption due to the pandemic. Our study proposes and demonstrates a method for measuring and investigating the impact of such planned and unplanned disruptions affecting hospital care pathways. We found that during the pandemic, both A &E and maternity pathways had measurable reductions in the mean length of stay and a measurable drop in the percentage of pathways conforming to normative models. There were no distinctive patterns of monthly mean values of length of stay nor conformance throughout the phases of the installation of the hospital’s new Command Centre approach. Due to a deficit in the available A &E data, the findings for A &E pathways could not be interpreted
Resilient and Scalable Forwarding for Software-Defined Networks with P4-Programmable Switches
Traditional networking devices support only fixed features and limited configurability.
Network softwarization leverages programmable software and hardware platforms to remove those limitations.
In this context the concept of programmable data planes allows directly to program the packet processing pipeline of networking devices and create custom control plane algorithms.
This flexibility enables the design of novel networking mechanisms where the status quo struggles to meet high demands of next-generation networks like 5G, Internet of Things, cloud computing, and industry 4.0.
P4 is the most popular technology to implement programmable data planes.
However, programmable data planes, and in particular, the P4 technology, emerged only recently.
Thus, P4 support for some well-established networking concepts is still lacking and several issues remain unsolved due to the different characteristics of programmable data planes in comparison to traditional networking.
The research of this thesis focuses on two open issues of programmable data planes.
First, it develops resilient and efficient forwarding mechanisms for the P4 data plane as there are no satisfying state of the art best practices yet.
Second, it enables BIER in high-performance P4 data planes.
BIER is a novel, scalable, and efficient transport mechanism for IP multicast traffic which has only very limited support of high-performance forwarding platforms yet.
The main results of this thesis are published as 8 peer-reviewed and one post-publication peer-reviewed publication. The results cover the development of suitable resilience mechanisms for P4 data planes, the development and implementation of resilient BIER forwarding in P4, and the extensive evaluations of all developed and implemented mechanisms. Furthermore, the results contain a comprehensive P4 literature study.
Two more peer-reviewed papers contain additional content that is not directly related to the main results.
They implement congestion avoidance mechanisms in P4 and develop a scheduling concept to find cost-optimized load schedules based on day-ahead forecasts
Share and Repair in Cities: Developing Agenda for Research and Practice on Circular Urban Resilience
D4.2 Intelligent D-Band wireless systems and networks initial designs
This deliverable gives the results of the ARIADNE project's Task 4.2: Machine Learning based network intelligence. It presents the work conducted on various aspects of network management to deliver system level, qualitative solutions that leverage diverse machine learning techniques. The different chapters present system level, simulation and algorithmic models based on multi-agent reinforcement learning, deep reinforcement learning, learning automata for complex event forecasting, system level model for proactive handovers and resource allocation, model-driven deep learning-based channel estimation and feedbacks as well as strategies for deployment of machine learning based solutions. In short, the D4.2 provides results on promising AI and ML based methods along with their limitations and potentials that have been investigated in the ARIADNE project
Iterative musical collaboration as palimpsest: Suite Inversée and The Headroom Project
Suite inversée is a musical work, co-composed by the two authors asynchronously
online by means of file transfer alone and digitally presented using a self-made web
app called The Headroom Project. The Headroom Project mediates the compositional
project during creation as well as allowing the listener to browse a historical thread
that weaves through the developmental process: through this app, each audio file that
was shared between the two composers can be heard and considered both in and out
of the context of its creation. The framework of the project provided the opportunity
for the authors to reflect on issues of remote digital collaboration and the palimpsest
nature of a work revealed in varying stages of evolution through a novel mode of
presentation. This paper discusses the mode of creation by situating it within narratives
of composition and technology
Jornadas Nacionales de Investigación en Ciberseguridad: actas de las VIII Jornadas Nacionales de Investigación en ciberseguridad: Vigo, 21 a 23 de junio de 2023
Jornadas Nacionales de Investigación en Ciberseguridad (8ª. 2023. Vigo)atlanTTicAMTEGA: Axencia para a modernización tecnolóxica de GaliciaINCIBE: Instituto Nacional de Cibersegurida
Recommended from our members
TOWARDS RELIABLE CIRCUMVENTION OF INTERNET CENSORSHIP
The Internet plays a crucial role in today\u27s social and political movements by facilitating the free circulation of speech, information, and ideas; democracy and human rights throughout the world critically depend on preserving and bolstering the Internet\u27s openness. Consequently, repressive regimes, totalitarian governments, and corrupt corporations regulate, monitor, and restrict the access to the Internet, which is broadly known as Internet \emph{censorship}. Most countries are improving the internet infrastructures, as a result they can implement more advanced censoring techniques. Also with the advancements in the application of machine learning techniques for network traffic analysis have enabled the more sophisticated Internet censorship. In this thesis, We take a close look at the main pillars of internet censorship, we will introduce new defense and attacks in the internet censorship literature.
Internet censorship techniques investigate users’ communications and they can decide to interrupt a connection to prevent a user from communicating with a specific entity. Traffic analysis is one of the main techniques used to infer information from internet communications. One of the major challenges to traffic analysis mechanisms is scaling the techniques to today\u27s exploding volumes of network traffic, i.e., they impose high storage, communications, and computation overheads. We aim at addressing this scalability issue by introducing a new direction for traffic analysis, which we call \emph{compressive traffic analysis}. Moreover, we show that, unfortunately, traffic analysis attacks can be conducted on Anonymity systems with drastically higher accuracies than before by leveraging emerging learning mechanisms. We particularly design a system, called \deepcorr, that outperforms the state-of-the-art by significant margins in correlating network connections. \deepcorr leverages an advanced deep learning architecture to \emph{learn} a flow correlation function tailored to complex networks. Also to be able to analyze the weakness of such approaches we show that an adversary can defeat deep neural network based traffic analysis techniques by applying statistically undetectable \emph{adversarial perturbations} on the patterns of live network traffic.
We also design techniques to circumvent internet censorship. Decoy routing is an emerging approach for censorship circumvention in which circumvention is implemented with help from a number of volunteer Internet autonomous systems, called decoy ASes. We propose a new architecture for decoy routing that, by design, is significantly stronger to rerouting attacks compared to \emph{all} previous designs. Unlike previous designs, our new architecture operates decoy routers only on the downstream traffic of the censored users; therefore we call it \emph{downstream-only} decoy routing. As we demonstrate through Internet-scale BGP simulations, downstream-only decoy routing offers significantly stronger resistance to rerouting attacks, which is intuitively because a (censoring) ISP has much less control on the downstream BGP routes of its traffic. Then, we propose to use game theoretic approaches to model the arms races between the censors and the censorship circumvention tools. This will allow us to analyze the effect of different parameters or censoring behaviors on the performance of censorship circumvention tools. We apply our methods on two fundamental problems in internet censorship.
Finally, to bring our ideas to practice, we designed a new censorship circumvention tool called \name. \name aims at increasing the collateral damage of censorship by employing a ``mass\u27\u27 of normal Internet users, from both censored and uncensored areas, to serve as circumvention proxies
- …