208 research outputs found

    E-Mail Tracking: Status Quo and Novel Countermeasures

    Get PDF
    E-mail advertisement, as one instrument in the marketing mix, allows companies to collect fine-grained behavioural data about individual users’ e-mail reading habits realised through sophisticated tracking mechanisms. Such tracking can be harmful for user privacy and security. This problem is especially severe since e-mail tracking techniques gather data without user consent. Striving to increase privacy and security in e-mail communication, the paper makes three contributions. First, a large database of newsletter e-mails is developed. This data facilitates investigating the prevalence of e-mail tracking among 300 global enterprises from Germany, the United Kingdom and the United States. Second, countermeasures are developed for automatically identifying and blocking e-mail tracking mechanisms without impeding the user experience. The approach consists of identifying important tracking descriptors and creating a neural network-based detection model. Last, the effectiveness of the proposed approach is established by means of empirical experimentation. The results suggest a classification accuracy of 99.99%

    The Price of Privacy - An Evaluation of the Economic Value of Collecting Clickstream Data

    Get PDF
    The analysis of clickstream data facilitates the understanding and prediction of customer behavior in e-commerce. Companies can leverage such data to increase revenue. For customers and website users, on the other hand, the collection of behavioral data entails privacy invasion. The objective of the paper is to shed light on the trade-off between privacy and the business value of cus- tomer information. To that end, the authors review approaches to convert clickstream data into behavioral traits, which we call clickstream features, and propose a categorization of these features according to the potential threat they pose to user privacy. The authors then examine the extent to which different categories of clickstream features facilitate predictions of online user shopping pat- terns and approximate the marginal utility of using more privacy adverse information in behavioral prediction models. Thus, the paper links the literature on user privacy to that on e-commerce analytics and takes a step toward an economic analysis of privacy costs and benefits. In par- ticular, the results of empirical experimentation with large real-world e-commerce data suggest that the inclusion of short-term customer behavior based on session-related information leads to large gains in predictive accuracy and business performance, while storing and aggregating usage behavior over longer horizons has comparably less value

    Fast Strategies in Waiter-Client Games on KnK_n

    Full text link
    Waiter-Client games are played on some hypergraph (X,F)(X,\mathcal{F}), where F\mathcal{F} denotes the family of winning sets. For some bias bb, during each round of such a game Waiter offers to Client b+1b+1 elements of XX, of which Client claims one for himself while the rest go to Waiter. Proceeding like this Waiter wins the game if she forces Client to claim all the elements of any winning set from F\mathcal{F}. In this paper we study fast strategies for several Waiter-Client games played on the edge set of the complete graph, i.e. X=E(Kn)X=E(K_n), in which the winning sets are perfect matchings, Hamilton cycles, pancyclic graphs, fixed spanning trees or factors of a given graph.Comment: 38 page

    Clinical presentation of simple and combined or syndromic arteriovenous malformations.

    Get PDF
    OBJECTIVES Arteriovenous malformations of the lower extremities (AVMLE) can present as simple or complex combined or syndromic forms (e.g. Parkes Weber Syndrome). We aimed to characterize the differences in clinical presentation and natural history of these potentially life and limb threatening congenital vascular malformations. METHODS We conducted a retrospective analysis of a consecutive series of patients with AVMLE, who presented to a tertiary referral center in Switzerland between 2008 and 2018. Clinical baseline characteristics, D-dimer level and course were summarized and differences between simple, non-syndromic and combined or syndromic AVMLE determined. Odds ratios (OR) and 95% confidence intervals (CI) were estimated using logistic regression models. RESULTS Overall, 506 patients were prospectively enrolled in the Bernese Congenital Vascular Malformation Registry, 31 (6%) with AVMLE. There were 16 women and 15 men with a mean age of 18 years at first diagnosis (1 month - 72 years). Simple AVMLE was present in 22 (71%), combined or syndromic AVMLE with limb overgrowth in 9 patients (29%), respectively. Common symptoms and signs were pain 25 (81%), swelling 21 (68%) and soft tissue hypertrophy 13 (42%). Among combined or syndromic patients, 3 patients died from wound infection with sepsis or disseminated intravascular coagulation with bleeding complications (intracranial hemorrhage and bleeding from extensive leg ulcers). Combined or syndromic patients presented more often with bleeding (67% vs. 5%; p<0.001), malformation related infection (44% vs. 5%; p=0,017) and leg length difference (56% vs. 14%; p=0.049). D-dimer levels were elevated (mean 17256 μg/L, range 1557 μg/L to 80000 μg/L) and angiographic appearance showed complex, mixed type of AVMs, including interstitial type IV, in all patients with combined or syndromic AVMLE. CONCLUSION Patients with congenital simple AVMLE most often present with benign clinical features and rarely complications related to hemodynamic changes. Patients with combined or syndromic AVMLE often face serious outcomesdominated by complications other than direct high flow related heart failure

    Decreased expression of miR-146a and miR-155 contributes to an abnormal Treg phenotype in patients with rheumatoid arthritis

    Get PDF
    Objectives: MicroRNAs (miRNAs) have been implicated in the pathogenesis of autoimmune diseases, not least for their critical role in the regulation of regulatory T cell (Treg) function. Deregulated expression of miR-146a and miR-155 has been associated with rheumatoid arthritis (RA). We therefore investigated miR-146a and miR-155 expression in Tregs of patients with RA and their possible impact on Treg function and disease activity. Methods: Expression of miR-146a and miR-155 was assessed in RA patients and controls. MiRNA expression was correlated with disease activity and expression of target genes. Interference with biological activity of miRNAs was evaluated in functional Treg assays. Results: Diminished upregulation of miR-146a and miR-155 in response to T cell stimulation was found in Tregs of RA patients. Diminution of miR-146a expression was observed in particular in patients with active disease, and correlated with joint inflammation. In patients with active RA, Tregs demonstrated a pro-inflammatory phenotype characterised by inflammatory cytokine expression. This was due to an augmented expression and activation of signal transducer and activator transcription 1 (STAT1), a direct target of miR-146a. Conclusions: Our results suggest that in RA miR-146a facilitates a pro-inflammatory phenotype of Tregs via increased STAT1 activation, and contributes thereby to RA pathogenesis

    Decreased expression of miR-146a and miR-155 contributes to an abnormal Treg phenotype in patients with rheumatoid arthritis

    Get PDF
    Objectives: MicroRNAs (miRNAs) have been implicated in the pathogenesis of autoimmune diseases, not least for their critical role in the regulation of regulatory T cell (Treg) function. Deregulated expression of miR-146a and miR-155 has been associated with rheumatoid arthritis (RA). We therefore investigated miR-146a and miR-155 expression in Tregs of patients with RA and their possible impact on Treg function and disease activity. Methods: Expression of miR-146a and miR-155 was assessed in RA patients and controls. MiRNA expression was correlated with disease activity and expression of target genes. Interference with biological activity of miRNAs was evaluated in functional Treg assays. Results: Diminished upregulation of miR-146a and miR-155 in response to T cell stimulation was found in Tregs of RA patients. Diminution of miR-146a expression was observed in particular in patients with active disease, and correlated with joint inflammation. In patients with active RA, Tregs demonstrated a pro-inflammatory phenotype characterised by inflammatory cytokine expression. This was due to an augmented expression and activation of signal transducer and activator transcription 1 (STAT1), a direct target of miR-146a. Conclusions: Our results suggest that in RA miR-146a facilitates a pro-inflammatory phenotype of Tregs via increased STAT1 activation, and contributes thereby to RA pathogenesis
    corecore