2,563 research outputs found
Worst-input mutation approach to web services vulnerability testing based on SOAP messages
The growing popularity and application of Web services have led to an increase in attention to the vulnerability of software based on these services. Vulnerability testing examines the trustworthiness, and reduces the security risks of software systems, however such testing of Web services has become increasing challenging due to the cross-platform and heterogeneous characteristics of their deployment. This paper proposes a worst-input mutation approach for testing Web service vulnerability based on SOAP (Simple Object Access Protocol) messages. Based on characteristics of the SOAP messages, the proposed approach uses the farthest neighbor concept to guide generation of the test suite. The test case generation algorithm is presented, and a prototype Web service vulnerability testing tool described. The tool was applied to the testing of Web services on the Internet, with experimental results indicating that the proposed approach, which found more vulnerability faults than other related approaches, is both practical and effective
Visual Affect Around the World: A Large-scale Multilingual Visual Sentiment Ontology
Every culture and language is unique. Our work expressly focuses on the
uniqueness of culture and language in relation to human affect, specifically
sentiment and emotion semantics, and how they manifest in social multimedia. We
develop sets of sentiment- and emotion-polarized visual concepts by adapting
semantic structures called adjective-noun pairs, originally introduced by Borth
et al. (2013), but in a multilingual context. We propose a new
language-dependent method for automatic discovery of these adjective-noun
constructs. We show how this pipeline can be applied on a social multimedia
platform for the creation of a large-scale multilingual visual sentiment
concept ontology (MVSO). Unlike the flat structure in Borth et al. (2013), our
unified ontology is organized hierarchically by multilingual clusters of
visually detectable nouns and subclusters of emotionally biased versions of
these nouns. In addition, we present an image-based prediction task to show how
generalizable language-specific models are in a multilingual context. A new,
publicly available dataset of >15.6K sentiment-biased visual concepts across 12
languages with language-specific detector banks, >7.36M images and their
metadata is also released.Comment: 11 pages, to appear at ACM MM'1
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