41,086 research outputs found
Show Me Your Cookie And I Will Tell You Who You Are
With the success of Web applications, most of our data is now stored on
various third-party servers where they are processed to deliver personalized
services. Naturally we must be authenticated to access this personal
information, but the use of personalized services only restricted by
identification could indirectly and silently leak sensitive data. We analyzed
Google Web Search access mechanisms and found that the current policy applied
to session cookies could be used to retrieve users' personal data. We describe
an attack scheme leveraging the search personalization (based on the same SID
cookie) to retrieve a part of the victim's click history and even some of her
contacts. We implemented a proof of concept of this attack on Firefox and
Chrome Web browsers and conducted an experiment with ten volunteers. Thanks to
this prototype we were able to recover up to 80% of the user's search click
history
The Official Student Newspaper of UAS
UAS Answers: Everybody's got one... -- Spike the Whale Sculpture! -- Ways we're being financially exploited -- Alaska to Germany: Who? What? Where? When? How? -- Suddenly, College: How to survive living with roommates -- Happy Trails: Hiking at Salmon Creek -- A fun weekend at the Rec: Minute to Win It! -- Reinventing the Chocolate Chip cookie -- Let me tell you a thing: Philosophometrics Simplified -- Campus Calenda
Sixty original plays for primary grades
Thesis (Ed.M.)--Boston Universit
Take Notes
Prose by Matt Del Busto. Finalist in the 2019 Manuscripts Prose Contest
The Whalesong
Student Senate opposes tuition fee -- Senate votes to open the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge -- Campus calendar -- Program cuts haunt budget -- Got class? Register now -- Big oil leaves messy tracks in Alaska -- "C" is for cookie, that's good enough for me -- Poetry corner -- Photo student leaves UAS bittersweet -- Requiem gives talented students musical outlet -- Native oratory contest awards speaking skills -- Winner of Pulitzer Prize for poetry visits UAS campus -- Diversity: A key to education in the 21st century -- Graduation still elusive -- Ready or not for finals -- Ten tips to tension tamed tests -- Finals crossword -- Congratulations to UAS fall and spring 2005 graduate
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Unmaking him : Lee Daniels' Empire and the potential black masculine
This paper uses Lee Daniels’ hit show Empire to examine the relationship between two fictional television brothers- Jamal and Hakeem Lyon. In examining this relationship, I employ black feminist and black queer theory to interrogate the ways in which Lee Daniels’ particular representation lends to an expansion of current notions of black masculinity within the quotidian. I argue that through re-representing the ways in which black men interact and are intimate, Empire helps to unmake ideals of black masculinity steeped in stabilizing patriarchy and moves to expand what and how black men can be. Through imagining that the promise of black feminist and black queer theory is the ability to remake self outside of the normative, this project moves in the vein of such to imagine what potential alternative black masculinities look like.African and African Diaspora Studie
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