355,216 research outputs found
Detecting and Refactoring Operational Smells within the Domain Name System
The Domain Name System (DNS) is one of the most important components of the
Internet infrastructure. DNS relies on a delegation-based architecture, where
resolution of names to their IP addresses requires resolving the names of the
servers responsible for those names. The recursive structures of the inter
dependencies that exist between name servers associated with each zone are
called dependency graphs. System administrators' operational decisions have far
reaching effects on the DNSs qualities. They need to be soundly made to create
a balance between the availability, security and resilience of the system. We
utilize dependency graphs to identify, detect and catalogue operational bad
smells. Our method deals with smells on a high-level of abstraction using a
consistent taxonomy and reusable vocabulary, defined by a DNS Operational
Model. The method will be used to build a diagnostic advisory tool that will
detect configuration changes that might decrease the robustness or security
posture of domain names before they become into production.Comment: In Proceedings GaM 2015, arXiv:1504.0244
Qualitative Effects of Knowledge Rules in Probabilistic Data Integration
One of the problems in data integration is data overlap: the fact that different data sources have data on the same real world entities. Much development time in data integration projects is devoted to entity resolution. Often advanced similarity measurement techniques are used to remove semantic duplicates from the integration result or solve other semantic conflicts, but it proofs impossible to get rid of all semantic problems in data integration. An often-used rule of thumb states that about 90% of the development effort is devoted to solving the remaining 10% hard cases. In an attempt to significantly decrease human effort at data integration time, we have proposed an approach that stores any remaining semantic uncertainty and conflicts in a probabilistic database enabling it to already be meaningfully used. The main development effort in our approach is devoted to defining and tuning knowledge rules and thresholds. Rules and thresholds directly impact the size and quality of the integration result. We measure integration quality indirectly by measuring the quality of answers to queries on the integrated data set in an information retrieval-like way. The main contribution of this report is an experimental investigation of the effects and sensitivity of rule definition and threshold tuning on the integration quality. This proves that our approach indeed reduces development effort — and not merely shifts the effort to rule definition and threshold tuning — by showing that setting rough safe thresholds and defining only a few rules suffices to produce a ‘good enough’ integration that can be meaningfully used
Equality of Arms in the Digital Age
Electronic commerce is important, and perhaps, inevitable. Thus to consider the legal implications of the growth and development of electronic commerce is essential. However, the lack of suitable dispute resolution mechanisms in cyberspace will constitute a serious obstacle to the further development of electronic commerce. Bearing this in mind, this paper argues that when Alternative Dispute Resolution
(ADR) moves to cyberspace, particularly arbitration and mediation as the main types of ADR, the form of online alternative dispute resolution (OADR) can maximise the growth of e-commerce
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