861 research outputs found
SUPER: Towards the Use of Social Sensors for Security Assessments and Proactive Management of Emergencies
Social media statistics during recent disasters (e.g. the 20 million tweets relating to 'Sandy' storm and the sharing of related photos in Instagram at a rate of 10/sec) suggest that the understanding and management of real-world events by civil protection and law enforcement agencies could benefit from the effective blending of social media information into their resilience processes. In this paper, we argue that despite the widespread use of social media in various domains (e.g. marketing/branding/finance), there is still no easy, standardized and effective way to leverage different social media streams -- also referred to as social sensors -- in security/emergency management applications. We also describe the EU FP7 project SUPER (Social sensors for secUrity assessments and Proactive EmeRgencies management), started in 2014, which aims to tackle this technology gap
MAG: A Multilingual, Knowledge-base Agnostic and Deterministic Entity Linking Approach
Entity linking has recently been the subject of a significant body of
research. Currently, the best performing approaches rely on trained
mono-lingual models. Porting these approaches to other languages is
consequently a difficult endeavor as it requires corresponding training data
and retraining of the models. We address this drawback by presenting a novel
multilingual, knowledge-based agnostic and deterministic approach to entity
linking, dubbed MAG. MAG is based on a combination of context-based retrieval
on structured knowledge bases and graph algorithms. We evaluate MAG on 23 data
sets and in 7 languages. Our results show that the best approach trained on
English datasets (PBOH) achieves a micro F-measure that is up to 4 times worse
on datasets in other languages. MAG, on the other hand, achieves
state-of-the-art performance on English datasets and reaches a micro F-measure
that is up to 0.6 higher than that of PBOH on non-English languages.Comment: Accepted in K-CAP 2017: Knowledge Capture Conferenc
Control What You Include! Server-Side Protection against Third Party Web Tracking
Third party tracking is the practice by which third parties recognize users
accross different websites as they browse the web. Recent studies show that 90%
of websites contain third party content that is tracking its users across the
web. Website developers often need to include third party content in order to
provide basic functionality. However, when a developer includes a third party
content, she cannot know whether the third party contains tracking mechanisms.
If a website developer wants to protect her users from being tracked, the only
solution is to exclude any third-party content, thus trading functionality for
privacy. We describe and implement a privacy-preserving web architecture that
gives website developers a control over third party tracking: developers are
able to include functionally useful third party content, the same time ensuring
that the end users are not tracked by the third parties
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