1,120 research outputs found
Informe anual del Consejo Nacional de Planificación (Año 1952)
Informe anual del Consejo Nacional de Planificación del cuál era miembro Albert O. Hirschman. Este documento se obtuvo gracias a la colaboración de Adalgisa Abdala de la dirección del Departamento de Documentación y Editorial del Banco de la República.Informe anual Consejo Nacional de planificación, Hirschman
Conclave: secure multi-party computation on big data (extended TR)
Secure Multi-Party Computation (MPC) allows mutually distrusting parties to
run joint computations without revealing private data. Current MPC algorithms
scale poorly with data size, which makes MPC on "big data" prohibitively slow
and inhibits its practical use.
Many relational analytics queries can maintain MPC's end-to-end security
guarantee without using cryptographic MPC techniques for all operations.
Conclave is a query compiler that accelerates such queries by transforming them
into a combination of data-parallel, local cleartext processing and small MPC
steps. When parties trust others with specific subsets of the data, Conclave
applies new hybrid MPC-cleartext protocols to run additional steps outside of
MPC and improve scalability further.
Our Conclave prototype generates code for cleartext processing in Python and
Spark, and for secure MPC using the Sharemind and Obliv-C frameworks. Conclave
scales to data sets between three and six orders of magnitude larger than
state-of-the-art MPC frameworks support on their own. Thanks to its hybrid
protocols, Conclave also substantially outperforms SMCQL, the most similar
existing system.Comment: Extended technical report for EuroSys 2019 pape
Patterns of dominant flows in the world trade web
The large-scale organization of the world economies is exhibiting
increasingly levels of local heterogeneity and global interdependency.
Understanding the relation between local and global features calls for
analytical tools able to uncover the global emerging organization of the
international trade network. Here we analyze the world network of bilateral
trade imbalances and characterize its overall flux organization, unraveling
local and global high-flux pathways that define the backbone of the trade
system. We develop a general procedure capable to progressively filter out in a
consistent and quantitative way the dominant trade channels. This procedure is
completely general and can be applied to any weighted network to detect the
underlying structure of transport flows. The trade fluxes properties of the
world trade web determines a ranking of trade partnerships that highlights
global interdependencies, providing information not accessible by simple local
analysis. The present work provides new quantitative tools for a dynamical
approach to the propagation of economic crises
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