7,970 research outputs found
I Know Why You Went to the Clinic: Risks and Realization of HTTPS Traffic Analysis
Revelations of large scale electronic surveillance and data mining by
governments and corporations have fueled increased adoption of HTTPS. We
present a traffic analysis attack against over 6000 webpages spanning the HTTPS
deployments of 10 widely used, industry-leading websites in areas such as
healthcare, finance, legal services and streaming video. Our attack identifies
individual pages in the same website with 89% accuracy, exposing personal
details including medical conditions, financial and legal affairs and sexual
orientation. We examine evaluation methodology and reveal accuracy variations
as large as 18% caused by assumptions affecting caching and cookies. We present
a novel defense reducing attack accuracy to 27% with a 9% traffic increase, and
demonstrate significantly increased effectiveness of prior defenses in our
evaluation context, inclusive of enabled caching, user-specific cookies and
pages within the same website
Constructing families of moderate-rank elliptic curves over number fields
We generalize a construction of families of moderate rank elliptic curves
over to number fields . The construction, originally
due to Steven J. Miller, \'Alvaro Lozano-Robledo and Scott Arms, invokes a
theorem of Rosen and Silverman to show that computing the rank of these curves
can be done by controlling the average of the traces of Frobenius, the
construction for number fields proceeds in essentially the same way. One
novelty of this method is that we can construct families of moderate rank
without having to explicitly determine points and calculating determinants of
height matrices.Comment: Version 1.0, 4 pages, sequel to arXiv:math/040657
Chemiluminescent Tags for Tracking Insect Movement in Darkness: Application to Moth Photo-Orientation
The flight tracks of Manduca sexta (Lepidoptera: Sphingidae) flying toward a 5 watt incandescent light bulb were recorded under low light conditions with the aid of a camera-mounted photomultiplier and a glowing marker technique. Small felt pads bearing a chemiluminescent (glowi maerial, Cyalume®, were affixed to the abdomens of free-flying moths. insects orienting to a dim incandescent bulb were easily visible to the naked eye and were clearly captured on videotape. On their initial approach to the light source, M. sexta were found to orient at a mean angle of -0.220 ± 2.70 (mean ± SEM). The speed of the initial approach flight (OA ± 0.03 m/s) was significantly faster than the speed immediately after passing the light (0.29 ± 0.02 m/s; t =6.4, PM. sexta initially fly approximately at a light source and only after passing it, do they engage in circular flight around the source. M. sexta flight to lights does not entirely match any paths predicted by several light orientation mechanisms, including the commonly invoked light compass theory
Post-Therapeutic Thyroid Reserve: Thyroid Reserve in Euthyroid Patients After Ablative Therapy for Diffuse Toxic Goiter
Thyroid reserve was measured in 41 patients who were euthyroid 5 to 15 years after therapy for diffuse toxic goiter. Twenty-one of them had been treated by 131I, 20 by surgery and 10 were normal controls. All had a PBI (protein bound iodine) and 3-hour thyroidal 131I uptake. The same parameters of function were measured again 24 hours after they were given 10 units of thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH) intramuscularly. Only two patients in each treatment group responded with normal elevation of both the PBI and 131I uptake. In 52% of the 131I-treated patients and in 55% of those surgically treated there was no significant increase in either PBI or thyroidal iodine uptake. These results suggest that current efforts to reduce the early post 131I incidence of hypothyroidism may result in a long-term reduction of this complication as well and make this group comparable to those treated surgically. It is certain, however, that no patient receiving either therapy should be dismissed from continuing medical followup
Vertical Conflicts: The Role of State Law in Suits under Section 301
One of the most difficult practical problems posed by our federal system arises when the judicial institutions of one law-making authority are enlisted to enforce and protect rights created by another. While the United States Supreme Court through its appellate jurisdiction is the institution charged with the final responsibility for overseeing a satisfactory solution to this problem, and while the Court can indicate how competing interests are to be harmonized in specific controversies and provide some principles which may be useful in different contexts, it cannot review every state 301 suit. In the long run, success depends upon the earnest labors of state courts to identify the policies which are in conflict and bring their energies to bear in an effort to achieve a true resolution of the competing interests. For the most part, the Court has delineated the policy values under 301 law, and what remains is the application of these policies to specific issues which arise during the course of litigation. It is the purpose of this note to engage in the type of analytical processes state courts must undertake and to reach some conclusions concerning the role of state law in suits brought under section 301
Bridge trisections and classical knotted surface theory
We seek to connect ideas in the theory of bridge trisections with other
well-studied facets of classical knotted surface theory. First, we show how the
normal Euler number can be computed from a tri-plane diagram, and we use this
to give a trisection-theoretic proof of the Whitney-Massey Theorem, which
bounds the possible values of this number in terms of the Euler characteristic.
Second, we describe in detail how to compute the fundamental group and related
invariants from a tri-plane diagram, and we use this, together with an analysis
of bridge trisections of ribbon surfaces, to produce an infinite family of
knotted spheres that admit non-isotopic bridge trisections of minimal
complexity.Comment: v1 has been divided into two papers: the present article and "Bridge
trisections and Seifert solids," which will be posted simultaneously; 29
pages, 11 figure
Supersonic boundary-layer transition on the LaRC F-106 and the DFRF F-15 aircraft. Part 1: Transition measurements and stability analysis
For the case of the F-15 flight tests, boundary layer transition was observed up to Mach numbers of 1.2. For very limited and specific flight conditions, laminar flow existed back to about 20 percent chord on the surface clean up glove. Hot film instrumentation was effective for locating the region of transition. For the F-106 flight tests, transition on the wing or vertical tail generally occurred very near the attachment line. Transition was believed to be caused by either attachment line contamination or strong cross flow development due to the high sweep angles of the test articles. The compressibility analysis showed that cross flow N-factors were in the range of 5 to 12 at transition
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