3 research outputs found

    Recent Trends in Communication Networks

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    In recent years there has been many developments in communication technology. This has greatly enhanced the computing power of small handheld resource-constrained mobile devices. Different generations of communication technology have evolved. This had led to new research for communication of large volumes of data in different transmission media and the design of different communication protocols. Another direction of research concerns the secure and error-free communication between the sender and receiver despite the risk of the presence of an eavesdropper. For the communication requirement of a huge amount of multimedia streaming data, a lot of research has been carried out in the design of proper overlay networks. The book addresses new research techniques that have evolved to handle these challenges

    Cyberattacks Strategy for Nonprofit Organizations

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    Information system security managers (ISSM) in nonprofits face increased cyberattack cases because nonprofits often use basic technology to save on costs. Nonprofit owners and managers need solutions to secure their data from cyberattacks. Grounded in the general systems theory, the purpose of this qualitative multiple case study was to explore strategies ISSMs at nonprofit organizations employ to protect against cyberattacks. Participants included five IT managers and directors of information technology in charge of security management in nonprofit organizations in Maryland, the District of Columbia, and Virginia. Data was generated through interviews and reviews of archival documents. The data analysis technique used was thematic analysis. Three themes emerged from the analysis: cybersecurity awareness, cybersecurity strategy, and third-party dependence. The nonprofits should consider the following recommendations: first, evaluate cybersecurity health by assessing the existent cyber threat environment. Second, develop and execute a comprehensive strategic plan on cybersecurity, including policies and procedures targeted at protecting sensitive and likely sensitive data. Third, evaluate in-house IT capabilities and consider hiring third-party vendors with expert skills. Fourth, create cybersecurity awareness by training the employees on data protection. The implications for positive social change include the potential for ISSMs conveying effective cybersecurity strategies for nonprofits to mitigate and prevent potential cybersecurity attacks, thus furthering the nonprofits’ missions

    Supervision de contenus multimédia : adaptation de contenu, politiques optimales de préchargement et coordination causale de flux

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    La qualité des systèmes d'informations distribués dépend de la pertinence du contenu mis à disposition, de la réactivité du service ainsi que de la cohérence des informations présentées. Nos travaux visent à améliorer ces trois critères de performance et passent par la prise en compte des caractéristiques de l'utilisateur, des ressources disponibles ou plus généralement du contexte d'exécution. Par conséquent, cette thèse comporte trois volets. Le premier volet se place dans le cadre de l'adaptation de systèmes d’information déployés dans des contextes dynamiques et stochastiques. Nous présentons une approche où des agents d’adaptation appliquent des politiques de décision séquentielle dans l'incertain. Nous modélisons ces agents par des Processus Décisionnels de Markov (PDM) selon que le contexte soit observable ou seulement partiellement observable (PDM Partiellement Observables). Dans le cas d’un service mobile de consultation de films, nous montrons en particulier qu’une politique d'adaptation de ce service à des ressources limitées peut être nuancée selon l'intérêt de l'utilisateur, estimé grâce à l’évaluation des signaux de retour implicite. Dans le deuxième volet, nous nous intéressons à l'optimisation de la réactivité d'un système qui propose des contenus hypermédia. Nous nous appuyons sur des techniques de préchargement pour réduire les latences. Comme précédemment, un PDM modélise les habitudes des utilisateurs et les ressources disponibles. La force de ce modèle réside dans sa capacité à fournir des politiques optimales de préchargement. Les premières politiques que nous obtenons sont simples. Nous enrichissons alors le modèle pour dériver des politiques de préchargement plus complexes et plus agressives et montrons leurs performances par simulation. Afin de personnaliser nos stratégies optimales nous proposons finalement un modèle PDMPO dont les politiques s'adaptent aux profils des utilisateurs. Le troisième volet se place dans le contexte des applications multimédia interactives distribuées et concerne le contrôle de la cohérence des flux multimédia répartis. Dans un tel contexte, plusieurs mécanismes de synchronisation sont nécessaires et plusieurs ordres logiques (fifo, causal, total) s'avèrent utiles. Nous proposons une boîte à outils capable de gérer plusieurs protocoles d’ordre partiel et d'assurer une délivrance correcte de chaque message, en respectant tous les ordres qui lui ont été imposés. Nous décrivons ensuite l’intégration des tolérances humaines vis-à-vis des courtes incohérences causales dans notre boîte à outils. Nos simulations montrent que de meilleures performances sont obtenues par cette méthode comparativement à d’autres approches, comme la causalité classique ou la Δ-causalité. ABSTRACT : Distributed systems information quality depends on service responsiveness, data consistency and its relevance according to user interests. The thesis aims to improve these three performance criteria by taking into account user characteristics, available ressources or more generally execution context. Naturally, the document is organized in three main parts. The first part discusses adaptation policies for information systems that are subject to dynamic and stochastic contexts. In our approach adaptation agents apply sequential decisional policies under uncertainty. We focus on the modeling of such decisional processes depending on whether the context is fully or partially observable. We use Markov Decision Processes (MDP) and Partially Observable MDP (POMDP) for modeling a movie browsing service in a mobile environment. Our model derives adaptation policies for this service that take into account the limited (and observable) resources. These policies are further refined according to the (partially observable) users’ interest level estimated from implicit feedback. Our theoretical models are validated through numerous simulations. The second part deals with hypermedia content delivery aiming to reduce navigation latencies by means of prefetching. As previously, we build upon an MDP model able to derive optimal prefetching policies integrating both user behaviour and ressource availability. First, we extend this model and propose more complex and aggressive policies. Second, the extended model is enriched by taking into account user's profile and therefore provides finer prefetching policies. It is worth noting that this model issues personnalized policies without explicily manipulating user profiles. The proposed extensions and the associated policies are validated through comparison with the original model and some heuristic approches. Finally, the third part considers multimedia applications in distributed contexts. In these contexts, highly interactive collaborative applications need to offer each user a consistent view of the interactions represented by the streams exchanged between dispersed groups of users. At the coordination level, strong ordering protocols for capturing and delivering streams' interactions (e.g. CAUSAL, TOTAL order) may be too expensive due to the variability of network conditions. We build upon previous work on expressing streams causality and propose a flexible coordination middleware for integrating different delivery modes (e.g. FIFO, CAUSAL, TOTAL) into a single channel (with respect to each of these protocols). Moreover, the proposed abstract channel can handle the mix of any partial or total order protocols. Integrating perceptual tolerance in our middleware, provides us with a coordination toolkit that performs better than Δ-causality, usually considered the best solutio
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