6,340 research outputs found
Backscatter from the Data Plane --- Threats to Stability and Security in Information-Centric Networking
Information-centric networking proposals attract much attention in the
ongoing search for a future communication paradigm of the Internet. Replacing
the host-to-host connectivity by a data-oriented publish/subscribe service
eases content distribution and authentication by concept, while eliminating
threats from unwanted traffic at an end host as are common in today's Internet.
However, current approaches to content routing heavily rely on data-driven
protocol events and thereby introduce a strong coupling of the control to the
data plane in the underlying routing infrastructure. In this paper, threats to
the stability and security of the content distribution system are analyzed in
theory and practical experiments. We derive relations between state resources
and the performance of routers and demonstrate how this coupling can be misused
in practice. We discuss new attack vectors present in its current state of
development, as well as possibilities and limitations to mitigate them.Comment: 15 page
Evaluation of the maternity quality and safety programme
This report presents findings on the impact of maternity quality and safety programmes in New Zealand.
Overview
Local maternity quality and safety programmes have been operating in each district health board (DHB) since 2012 and have raised the profile of maternity quality and safety by establishing more effective governance structures, enhanced clinical leadership and better engagement with the sector and consumers.
In 2014/15, the Ministry contracted Allen + Clarke, policy and regulatory specialists to evaluate the impact of the local maternity quality and safety programmes. They found that the programmes had started to deliver meaningful improvements and there was significant value in continued Ministry of Health investment and support.
The report highlights some of the challenges DHBs have faced in implementing the local maternity quality and safety programmes and provides useful information for DHBs as they move into the next phase of their local programmes.
In mid-2015 the Ministry of Health confirmed ongoing funding for DHB maternity quality and safety programmes
What is an Analogue for the Semantic Web and Why is Having One Important?
This paper postulates that for the Semantic Web to grow and gain input from fields that will surely benefit it, it needs to develop an analogue that will help people not only understand what it is, but what the potential opportunities are that are enabled by these new protocols. The model proposed in the paper takes the way that Web interaction has been framed as a baseline to inform a similar analogue for the Semantic Web. While the Web has been represented as a Page + Links, the paper presents the argument that the Semantic Web can be conceptualized as a Notebook + Memex. The argument considers how this model also presents new challenges for fundamental human interaction with computing, and that hypertext models have much to contribute to this new understanding for distributed information systems
Forum Session at the First International Conference on Service Oriented Computing (ICSOC03)
The First International Conference on Service Oriented Computing (ICSOC) was held in Trento, December 15-18, 2003. The focus of the conference ---Service Oriented Computing (SOC)--- is the new emerging paradigm for distributed computing and e-business processing that has evolved from object-oriented and component computing to enable building agile networks of collaborating business applications distributed within and across organizational boundaries. Of the 181 papers submitted to the ICSOC conference, 10 were selected for the forum session which took place on December the 16th, 2003. The papers were chosen based on their technical quality, originality, relevance to SOC and for their nature of being best suited for a poster presentation or a demonstration. This technical report contains the 10 papers presented during the forum session at the ICSOC conference. In particular, the last two papers in the report ere submitted as industrial papers
Non-Intrusive Subscriber Authentication for Next Generation Mobile Communication Systems
Merged with duplicate record 10026.1/753 on 14.03.2017 by CS (TIS)The last decade has witnessed massive growth in both the technological development, and
the consumer adoption of mobile devices such as mobile handsets and PDAs. The recent
introduction of wideband mobile networks has enabled the deployment of new services
with access to traditionally well protected personal data, such as banking details or
medical records. Secure user access to this data has however remained a function of the
mobile device's authentication system, which is only protected from masquerade abuse by
the traditional PIN, originally designed to protect against telephony abuse.
This thesis presents novel research in relation to advanced subscriber authentication for
mobile devices. The research began by assessing the threat of masquerade attacks on
such devices by way of a survey of end users. This revealed that the current methods of
mobile authentication remain extensively unused, leaving terminals highly vulnerable to
masquerade attack. Further investigation revealed that, in the context of the more
advanced wideband enabled services, users are receptive to many advanced
authentication techniques and principles, including the discipline of biometrics which
naturally lends itself to the area of advanced subscriber based authentication.
To address the requirement for a more personal authentication capable of being applied
in a continuous context, a novel non-intrusive biometric authentication technique was
conceived, drawn from the discrete disciplines of biometrics and Auditory Evoked
Responses. The technique forms a hybrid multi-modal biometric where variations in the
behavioural stimulus of the human voice (due to the propagation effects of acoustic
waves within the human head), are used to verify the identity o f a user. The resulting
approach is known as the Head Authentication Technique (HAT).
Evaluation of the HAT authentication process is realised in two stages. Firstly, the
generic authentication procedures of registration and verification are automated within a
prototype implementation. Secondly, a HAT demonstrator is used to evaluate the
authentication process through a series of experimental trials involving a representative
user community. The results from the trials confirm that multiple HAT samples from
the same user exhibit a high degree of correlation, yet samples between users exhibit a
high degree of discrepancy. Statistical analysis of the prototypes performance realised
early system error rates of; FNMR = 6% and FMR = 0.025%. The results clearly
demonstrate the authentication capabilities of this novel biometric approach and the
contribution this new work can make to the protection of subscriber data in next
generation mobile networks.Orange Personal Communication Services Lt
Volume 30, Number 4, December 2010
Digitized December 2010 issue of the OLAC Newsletter
Near Field Communication: From theory to practice
This book provides the technical essentials, state-of-the-art knowledge, business ecosystem and standards of Near Field Communication (NFC)by NFC Lab - Istanbul research centre which conducts intense research on NFC technology. In this book, the authors present the contemporary research on all aspects of NFC, addressing related security aspects as well as information on various business models. In addition, the book provides comprehensive information a designer needs to design an NFC project, an analyzer needs to analyze requirements of a new NFC based system, and a programmer needs to implement an application. Furthermore, the authors introduce the technical and administrative issues related to NFC technology, standards, and global stakeholders. It also offers comprehensive information as well as use case studies for each NFC operating mode to give the usage idea behind each operating mode thoroughly. Examples of NFC application development are provided using Java technology, and security considerations are discussed in detail. Key Features: Offers a complete understanding of the NFC technology, including standards, technical essentials, operating modes, application development with Java, security and privacy, business ecosystem analysis Provides analysis, design as well as development guidance for professionals from administrative and technical perspectives Discusses methods, techniques and modelling support including UML are demonstrated with real cases Contains case studies such as payment, ticketing, social networking and remote shopping This book will be an invaluable guide for business and ecosystem analysts, project managers, mobile commerce consultants, system and application developers, mobile developers and practitioners. It will also be of interest to researchers, software engineers, computer scientists, information technology specialists including students and graduates.Publisher's Versio
Developing a distributed electronic health-record store for India
The DIGHT project is addressing the problem of building a scalable and highly available information store for the Electronic Health Records (EHRs) of the over one billion citizens of India
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