1,107 research outputs found
Professor/practitioner case development program - 1998 case studies
https://egrove.olemiss.edu/aicpa_guides/1344/thumbnail.jp
Information Revolution: How INFORMATION MANAGEMENT is CHANGING the Lives of Rural People
This book is about successes. It is about how certain individuals or organizations are changing the way communication works, how they are making a difference to the lives and livelihoods of rural people. We have chosen as examples about 40 organizations in Africa, the Caribbean and the Pacific. Given time, we could have covered more: if your organization is not covered, please don’t feel slighted.
Paul Mundy; Jacques SultanThis book is about successes. It is about how certain individuals or organizations are changing the way communication works, how they are making a difference to the lives and livelihoods of rural people..
Automated Framework to Improve User?s Awareness and to Categorize Friends on Online Social Networks
The popularity of online social networks has brought up new privacy threats. These threats often arise after users willingly, but unwittingly reveal their information to a wider group of people than they actually intended. Moreover, the well adapted ?friends-based? privacy control has proven to be ill-equipped to prevent dynamic information disclosure, such as in user text posts. Ironically, it fails to capture the dynamic nature of this data by reducing the problem to manual privacy management which is time-consuming, tiresome and error-prone task. This dissertation identifies an important problem with posting on social networks and proposes a unique two phase approach to the problem. First, we suggest an additional layer of security be added to social networking sites. This layer includes a framework for natural language to automatically check texts to be posted by the user and detect dangerous information disclosure so it warns the user. A set of detection rules have been developed for this purpose and tested with over 16,000 Facebook posts to confirm the detection quality. The results showed that our approach has an 85% detection rate which outperforms other existing approaches. Second, we propose utilizing trust between friends as currency to access dangerous posts. The unique feature of our approach is that the trust value is related to the absence of interaction on the given topic. To approach our goal, we defined trust metrics that can be used to determine trustworthy friends in terms of the given topic. In addition, we built a tool which calculates the metrics automatically, and then generates a list of trusted friends. Our experiments show that our approach has reasonably acceptable performance in terms of predicting friends? interactions for the given posts. Finally, we performed some data analysis on a small set of user interaction records on Facebook to show that friends? interaction could be triggered by certain topics
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Decentralised computer systems
The architecture of the Web was designed to enable decentralised exchange of information. Early architects envisioned an egalitarian yet organic society thriving in cyberspace. The reality of the Web today, unfortunately, does not bear out these visions: information networks have repeatedly shown a tendency towards consolidation and centralisation with the current Web split between a handful of large corporations.
The advent of Bitcoin and successor blockchain networks re-ignited interest in developing alternatives to the centralised Web and paving a way back to the earlier architectural visions for the Web. This has led to immense hype around these technologies with the cryptocurrency market valued at several hundred billions of dollars at the time of writing. With great hype, apparently, come great scams. I start off by analysing the use of Bitcoin as an enabler for crime and then present both technical solutions as well as policy recommendations to mitigate the harm these crimes cause.
These policy recommendations then lead us on to look more closely at cryptocurrency's tamer cousin: permissioned blockchains. These systems, while less revolutionary in their premise, nevertheless aim to provide sweeping improvements in the efficiency and transparency of existing enterprise systems. To see whether they work in practice, I present the results of my work in delivering a production permissioned blockchain system to real users. This involves comparing several permissioned blockchain systems, exploring their deficiencies and developing solutions for the most egregious of those.
Lastly, I do a deep dive into one of the most persistent technical issues with permissioned blockchains, and decentralised networks in general: the lack of scalability in their consensus mechanisms. I present two novel consensus algorithms that aim to improve upon the state of the art in several ways. The first is designed to enable existing permissioned blockchain networks to scale to thousands of nodes. The second presents an entirely new way of building decentralised consensus systems utilising a trie-based data structure at its core as opposed to the usual linear ledgers used in current systems
“Be a Pattern for the World”: The Development of a Dark Patterns Detection Tool to Prevent Online User Loss
Dark Patterns are designed to trick users into sharing more information or spending more money than they had intended to do, by configuring online interactions to confuse or add pressure to the users. They are highly varied in their form, and are therefore difficult to classify and detect. Therefore, this research is designed to develop a framework for the automated detection of potential instances of web-based dark patterns, and from there to develop a software tool that will provide a highly useful defensive tool that helps detect and highlight these patterns
Minding the Gap: Computing Ethics and the Political Economy of Big Tech
In 1988 Michael Mahoney wrote that “[w]hat is truly revolutionary about the computer will become clear only when computing acquires a proper history, one that ties it to other technologies and thus uncovers the precedents that make its innovations significant” (Mahoney, 1988). Today, over thirty years after this quote was written, we are living right in the middle of the information age and computing technology is constantly transforming modern living in revolutionary ways and in such a high degree that is giving rise to many ethical considerations, dilemmas, and social disruption. To explore the myriad of issues associated with the ethical challenges of computers using the lens of political economy it is important to explore the history and development of computer technology
Technical Debt is an Ethical Issue
We introduce the problem of technical debt, with particular focus on critical infrastructure, and put forward our view that this is a digital ethics issue. We propose that the software engineering process must adapt its current notion of technical debt – focusing on technical costs – to include the potential cost to society if the technical debt is not addressed, and the cost of analysing, modelling and understanding this ethical debt. Finally, we provide an overview of the development of educational material – based on a collection of technical debt case studies - in order to teach about technical debt and its ethical implication
Rollins Alumni Record, November 1984
Greeks: Are they alive and well
Regulating the technological actor: how governments tried to transform the technology and the market for cryptography and cryptographic services and the implications for the regulation of information and communications technologies
The formulation, adoption, and transformation of policy
involves the interaction of actors as they negotiate, accept, and
reject proposals. Traditional studies of policy discourse focus
on social actors. By studying cryptography policy discourses, I
argue that considering both social and technological actors in
detail enriches our understanding of policy discourse.
The case-based research looks at the various cryptography
policy strategies employed by the governments of the United
States of America and the United Kingdom. The research
method is qualitative, using hermeneutics to elucidate the
various actors’ interpretations. The research aims to
understand policy discourse as a contest of principles involving
various government actors advocating multiple regulatory
mechanisms to maintain their surveillance capabilities, and the
reactions of industry actors, non-governmental organisations,
parliamentarians, and epistemic communities.
I argue that studying socio-technological discourse helps us to
understand the complex dynamics involved in regulation and
regulatory change. Interests and alignments may be contingent
and unstable. As a result, technologies can not be regarded as
mere representations of social interests and relationships.
By capturing the interpretations and articulations of social and
technological actors we may attain a better understanding of
the regulatory landscape for information and communications
technologies
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