575 research outputs found

    Making GDPR Usable: A Model to Support Usability Evaluations of Privacy

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    We introduce a new model for evaluating privacy that builds on the criteria proposed by the EuroPriSe certification scheme by adding usability criteria. Our model is visually represented through a cube, called Usable Privacy Cube (or UP Cube), where each of its three axes of variability captures, respectively: rights of the data subjects, privacy principles, and usable privacy criteria. We slightly reorganize the criteria of EuroPriSe to fit with the UP Cube model, i.e., we show how EuroPriSe can be viewed as a combination of only rights and principles, forming the two axes at the basis of our UP Cube. In this way we also want to bring out two perspectives on privacy: that of the data subjects and, respectively, that of the controllers/processors. We define usable privacy criteria based on usability goals that we have extracted from the whole text of the General Data Protection Regulation. The criteria are designed to produce measurements of the level of usability with which the goals are reached. Precisely, we measure effectiveness, efficiency, and satisfaction, considering both the objective and the perceived usability outcomes, producing measures of accuracy and completeness, of resource utilization (e.g., time, effort, financial), and measures resulting from satisfaction scales. In the long run, the UP Cube is meant to be the model behind a new certification methodology capable of evaluating the usability of privacy, to the benefit of common users. For industries, considering also the usability of privacy would allow for greater business differentiation, beyond GDPR compliance.Comment: 41 pages, 2 figures, 1 table, and appendixe

    Privacy Considerations when Designing Social Network Systems to Support Successful Ageing

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    A number of interventions exist to support older adults in ageing well and these typically involve support for an active and sociable ageing process. We set out to examine the privacy implications of an intervention that would monitor mobility and share lifestyle and health data with a community of trusted others. We took a privacy-by-design approach to the system in the early stages of its development, working with older adults to firstly understand their networks of trust and secondly understand their privacy concerns should information be exchanged across that network. We used a Johari Windows framework in the thematic analysis of our data, concluding that the social sharing of information in later life carried significant risk. Our participants worried about the social signaling associated with data sharing and were cautious about a system that had the potential to disrupt established networks

    TENSOR: a solution to dark web investigations

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    A wide range of criminal activities, particularly those related to hate crime, radicalisation and terrorism, have an ever-increasing online component that needs to be considered, captured and investigated. Activity on the Dark Web is becoming more commonplace and can be a significant factor in investigations. Such information may need to be coupled with other open-source information from the surface web and social media. Due to this, law enforcement is undergoing radical changes in their investigatory processes requiring new digital systems; however, aspects of the Dark Web still remain ‘off limits’ to investigators as they battle technical, regulatory and organisational challenges. TENSOR is conceived as a system that can address many of these challenges by providing a mechanism for investigators to capture intelligence from online sources including the Dark Web and convert it into structured and coherent data. Within the system, TENSOR implements a unique data model, acquisition and extraction process that enables information to become searchable, analysable and relatable. Several analytical capabilities are layered above delivering advanced functionalities including natural language processing and concept extraction, machine translation, image recognition and iconography detection, social network analysis, stylometry, content similarity recommendations and image forensics. Each capability is presented through a unified intelligence dashboard that provides a clear entry point and logical analysis pathway for investigation to ensure TENSOR delivers a system that enables law enforcement to access and analyse complex information from the surface, Deep and Dark Web

    E-Voting in an ubicomp world: trust, privacy, and social implications

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    The advances made in technology have unchained the user from the desktop into interactions where access is anywhere, anytime. In addition, the introduction of ubiquitous computing (ubicomp) will see further changes in how we interact with technology and also socially. Ubicomp evokes a near future in which humans will be surrounded by “always-on,” unobtrusive, interconnected intelligent objects where information is exchanged seamlessly. This seamless exchange of information has vast social implications, in particular the protection and management of personal information. This research project investigates the concepts of trust and privacy issues specifically related to the exchange of e-voting information when using a ubicomp type system

    Fractal Conductance Fluctuations in Gold--Nanowires

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    A detailed analysis of magneto-conductance fluctuations of quasiballistic gold-nanowires of various lengths is presented. We find that the variance = = when analyzed for ΔB\Delta B much smaller than the correlation field BcB_c varies according to <(ΔG)2>∝ΔBγ<(\Delta G)^2>\propto \Delta B^{\gamma} with γ<2\gamma < 2 indicating that the graph of GG vs. BB is fractal. We attribute this behavior to the existence of long-lived states arising from chaotic trajectories trapped close to regular classical orbits. We find that γ\gamma decreases with increasing length of the wires.Comment: 5 pages, Revtex with epsf, 4 Postscript figures, final version accepted as Phys. Rev. Let

    Three-dimensional digital reconstruction of human placental villus architecture in normal and complicated pregnancies.

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    Objective: This study aimed to examine the use of digital technology in the three-dimensional reconstruction of human placentas. Study design: Placentas obtained at term elective caesarean section were sampled, formalin-fixed and embedded in paraffin. Two hundred 5 mm consecutive sections were cut from each specimen and the resultant slides stained with haematoxylin and eosin. Slides were then scanned and the digitised images reconstructed using customised software. Results: Three-dimensional reconstructions were successfully achieved in placentas from normal pregnancies and those complicated by pre-eclampsia, growth restriction, and gestational diabetes. Marked morphological differences were readily identifiable, most clearly in the stem villus architecture. Conclusion: This method is an emerging research tool for examining placental histoarchitecture at high resolution and gaining clinically relevant insight into the placental pathology allied to pregnancy complications such as PET, IUGR and GD

    Modification of the ω\omega-Meson Lifetime in Nuclear Matter

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    The photo production of ω\omega mesons on the nuclei C, Ca, Nb and Pb has been measured using the Crystal Barrel/TAPS detector at the ELSA tagged photon facility in Bonn. The dependence of the ω\omega meson cross section on the nuclear mass number has been compared with three different types of models, a Glauber analysis, a BUU analysis of the Giessen theory group and a calculation by the Valencia theory group. In all three cases, the inelastic ω\omega width is found to be 130−150MeV/c2130-150 \rm{MeV/c^2} at normal nuclear matter density for an average 3-momentum of 1.1 GeV/c. In the restframe of the ω\omega meson, this inelastic ω\omega width corresponds to a reduction of the ω\omega lifetime by a factor ≈30\approx 30. For the first time, the momentum dependent ω\omegaN cross section has been extracted from the experiment and is in the range of 70 mb.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure

    Photoproduction of pi0 omega off protons for E(gamma) < 3 GeV

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    Differential and total cross-sections for photoproduction of gamma proton to proton pi0 omega and gamma proton to Delta+ omega were determined from measurements of the CB-ELSA experiment, performed at the electron accelerator ELSA in Bonn. The measurements covered the photon energy range from the production threshold up to 3GeV.Comment: 8 pages, 13 figure

    In-medium ω\omega mass from the Îł+Nb→π0Îł+X\gamma + Nb \to \pi^{0}\gamma + X reaction

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    Data on the photoproduction of ω\omega mesons on nuclei have been re-analyzed in a search for in-medium modifications. The data were taken with the Crystal Barrel(CB)/TAPS detector system at the ELSA accelerator facility in Bonn. First results from the analysis of the data set were published by D. Trnka et al. in Phys. Rev. Lett 94 (2005) 192303 \cite{david}, claiming a lowering of the ω\omega mass in the nuclear medium by 14% at normal nuclear matter density. The extracted ω\omega line shape was found to be sensitive to the background subtraction. For this reason a re-analysis of the same data set has been initiated and a new method has been developed to reduce the background and to determine the shape and absolute magnitude of the background directly from the data. Details of the re-analysis and of the background determination are described. The ω\omega signal on the NbNb target, extracted in the re-analysis, does not show a deviation from the corresponding line shape on a LH2LH_2 target, measured as reference. The earlier claim of an in-medium mass shift is thus not confirmed. The sensitivity of the ω\omega line shape to different in-medium modification scenarios is discussed.Comment: 13 pages and 11 figures, submitted for publicatio

    Regulatory Model for AAL

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    Proceedings of: 6th International Conference on Soft Computing Models in Industrial and Environmental Applications (SOCO 2011). Salamanca, April 6-8, 2011Abstract: In this work, authors define a set of principles that should be contained in context-aware applications (including biometric sensors) to accomplish the legal aspect in Europe and USA. Paper presents the necessity to consider legal aspect, related with pri-vacy or human rights, into the development of the incipient context based services. Clearly, context based services and Ambient Intelligence (and the most promising work area in Europe that is Ambient Assisted Living, ALL) needs a great effort in research new identification procedures.Publicad
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