175 research outputs found

    Economic drivers in security decisions in public Wi-Fi context

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    This thesis investigates economic drivers in security decisions in the context of public Wi-Fi. Four sets of studies took place. The first set examined the risks of public Wi-Fi today. An experimental rogue public Wi-Fi was set up for 150 hours first in London, UK, in 2016, and then in Nara, Japan, in 2017. Sensitive data such as emails and login credentials were found to have been transmitted insecurely. The second set of studies examined decision-making and drivers influencing users to use public Wi-Fi. Participants (106 - UK, 103 - Japan) took part in scenario-based questionnaires. Findings showed that the desire to save mobile data allowance, a form of resource preservation heuristic tendency (RPHT), significantly prompted participants who regularly face mobile data constraints to use public Wi-Fi. The next study examined evidence in the wild. Participants (71 - UK only) were recruited for three months to run My Wi-Fi Choices, an Android app developed to capture factors driving the decisions to use public Wi-Fi. The results emphasised the importance of RPHT in driving users to use public Wi-Fi. Therefore, advising an individual trapped in mobile data RPHT to stop using public Wi-Fi entirely is futile. Alternative security advice is needed. This led to the last set of studies examining user decision to adopt a Virtual Private Network (VPN) app which can help to mitigate public Wi-Fi risks. Discrete choice experiments were run with 243 participants (154 - UK, 94 - Japan) to examine attributes of a VPN app affecting user decision. Various attributes of a VPN app were identified as drivers for the download and installation and the actual use of the app. Combining the knowledge gained from all studies, this thesis proposes a RPHT-decision model explaining the effects of RPHT on security decisions

    Constitutionalising the Security Union: Effectiveness, Rule of Law and Rights on Countering Terrorism and Crime. CEPS Paperback, 21 November 2017

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    This collective volume offers a multidisciplinary examination of the critical issues and challenges associated with the EU’s initiative to build a Security Union, particularly in relation to common policies adopted at the member state level aimed at countering terrorism and crime. It delves into the EU’s efforts to support cross-border investigations, the exchange of information and international cooperation, taking stock of the effects on freedom and privacy. The various authors offer key research findings, which contributed to the European Commission’s 2017 Comprehensive Assessment of EU Security Policy. They identify and explore the main constitutional dilemmas facing the Security Union concerning EU standards enshrined in the Lisbon Treaty and the commitments undertaken in the context of the EU Better Regulation agenda. Hence, this timely examination of EU security policies sheds light on their effectiveness, proportionality, fundamental rights and societal implications

    From the conception to the definition of a new service: the case of the European GeoPKDD project”

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    La tesi affronta il processo che parte dalla generazione di un nuovo servizio di tipo technology push ed arriva fino alla sua definizione, attraverso l’analisi del lavoro svolto per WIND Telecomunicazioni s.p.a. nell’ambito del progetto Europeo GeoPKDD. Dopo un inquadramento teorico sulle metodologie di sviluppo di nuovi servizi e sulle peculiarità di uno sviluppo technology push rispetto al caso market pull, il lavoro si concentra sul processo che, partendo dalla generazione di nuove idee basate sulla tecnologia GeoPKDD, si ù concluso con la definizione delle specifiche finali da implementare nel servizio finale

    'Sand in the hand': young people's relationships with commercial media in the digital age

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    This thesis explores young people's experiences of contemporary, commercial media. It aims to provide a holistic understanding of new and more traditional media use.The study draws its theoretical framework from the fields of communication studies, consumer behaviour, cultural studies, marketing, sociology and social psychology. Despite several studies investigating young people and new media, a richer understanding of media consumption is needed, located within an ever more commercialised landscape. Assumptions of new media participation are frequently taken for granted, with limited critical analysis of the consumer experience. Studies from a marketing perspective have focused exclusively on managerial effectiveness to the detriment of consumer realities. Moving beyond media effects, it takes an active consumer-centered approach, contextualising new media consumption within the everyday lives of young people. It compares and contrasts practitioner tactics with young people's lived experiences of new and traditional media.Multiple methods of enquiry were used, informed by an interpretive approach. The initial fieldwork consisted of 15 interviews with 'expert' agency practitioners, investigating perceptions of youth marketing and the tactics deployed. Following a pilot study, the main consumer phase explored the mediated experiences of adolescents aged 13-17. A total of 175 secondary school pupils from three diverse school settings participated. Each completed a self-completion questionnaire, a smaller sample also contributing a time-based diary. 45 pupils participated in the qualitative phase, guided by the principles of phenomenology. Photo-elicitation and psycho-drawing techniques were utilised to enrichen discussions.The new media experiences of young people in this study were indeed bound up in their everyday lives. Young people were found to have a complex range of 'newmedia' experiences, embedded in their 'in home' and 'out of home' lifestyles. Their active use of the internet, for mood enhancement, experiential learning, escapism and communication, rarely encompassed commercial motivations. Of several barriers to new media use, online practitioner tactics caused the greatest concern. For many young people, such actions were deeply de-motivating, constituting an unwanted intrusion, in contrast to the symbiotic relationship synonymous with traditional advertising. Their consequent elusiveness is epitomised through the metaphor "sand in the hand"

    Evaluating Comprehensive Community Change

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    Summarizes discussions around current and emerging themes in evaluating programs, practices, and policies designed to strengthen children, families, and communities at the foundation's 1997 Research and Evaluation conference

    Responsible AI and Analytics for an Ethical and Inclusive Digitized Society

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    Entrepreneurial sons, patriarchy and the Colonels' experiment in Thessaly, rural Greece

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    Existing studies within the field of institutional entrepreneurship explore how entrepreneurs influence change in economic institutions. This paper turns the attention of scholarly inquiry on the antecedents of deinstitutionalization and more specifically, the influence of entrepreneurship in shaping social institutions such as patriarchy. The paper draws from the findings of ethnographic work in two Greek lowland village communities during the military Dictatorship (1967–1974). Paradoxically this era associated with the spread of mechanization, cheap credit, revaluation of labour and clear means-ends relations, signalled entrepreneurial sons’ individuated dissent and activism who were now able to question the Patriarch’s authority, recognize opportunities and act as unintentional agents of deinstitutionalization. A ‘different’ model of institutional change is presented here, where politics intersects with entrepreneurs, in changing social institutions. This model discusses the external drivers of institutional atrophy and how handling dissensus (and its varieties over historical time) is instrumental in enabling institutional entrepreneurship

    Ethical Issues in Covert, Security and Surveillance Research

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    The ebook edition of this title is Open Access and freely available to read online. The EU-funded PRO-RES Project aimed to produce a guidance framework that helps to deliver Responsible Research and Innovation (RRI). PRO-RES is a Horizon 2020 project coordinated by the European Science Foundation (ESF), involving 14 different partners across Europe. As one of a series of open access products of the Project, Ethical Issues in Covert, Security and Surveillance Research will be placed in the hands of policymakers and their advisors to offer practical and efficient ways to respond to the issues addressed. Understanding that the problem of covert research and surveillance research for security purposes have proven highly challenging for all research ethics appraisal services, the chapters here are valuable resources for expert reviewers, helping further the discussion of these complex ethical issues, and raising the standards applied to the process. Delivering an applied approach, and influencing where it counts, this volume showcases that it is only when the integrity of research is carefully pursued can users of the evidence produced be assured of its value and its ethical credentials
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