6 research outputs found
JShelter: Give Me My Browser Back
The Web is used daily by billions. Even so, users are not protected from many
threats by default. This position paper builds on previous web privacy and
security research and introduces JShelter, a webextension that fights to return
the browser to users. Moreover, we introduce a library helping with common
webextension development tasks and fixing loopholes misused by previous
research. JShelter focuses on fingerprinting prevention, limitations of rich
web APIs, prevention of attacks connected to timing, and learning information
about the computer, the browser, the user, and surrounding physical environment
and location. We discovered a loophole in the sensor timestamps that lets any
page observe the device boot time if sensor APIs are enabled in Chromium-based
browsers. JShelter provides a fingerprinting report and other feedback that can
be used by future security research and data protection authorities. Thousands
of users around the world use the webextension every day
Efficacy and educational role of a daily employment of the accelerometer to improve the life style in overweight-hypertensive population
ABSTRACT The daily evaluation of the life style is fundamental for the "exercise as prescription" to reduce the cardiovascular risks factors. The registration by an accelerometer can identify active from inactive subjects. The aim of the present study is to verify, in a small cohort of subjects at high risk level (obese-hypertensive), the health outcomes. A group of 22 subjects were evaluated by the questionnaire and also by an accelerometer positioned on belt for 5 days to establish the daily Physical Activity Level (PAL).The anthropometrics parameters, Body Mass Index (BMI), Waist Circumference, Hip Circumference, Fat Mass, Free Fat Mass, Total Body-Intracellular and Extracellular Water and Phase Angle (PA) were measured at the beginning and after 3 months of regular exercise. The amount of the exercise prescribed for three months and at least 3 times in a weak, was determined by the Cardiopulmonary test at the 60% of the VO2. Statistical analysis included T-Student test for paired data with a significance at P < 0.05value. Respect of the questionnaire the accelerometer report showed a predominantly inactive life style (PAL = 1.49 ± 0.13). After three months the BMI was significantly reduced in all (p < 0.05) and in addition a trend toward a reduction was also observed for Fatty Mass and for the body composition parameters. The employment of the accelerometer is therefore associated to an improvement of the parameters strongly related with the cardiovascular risk. The results obtained are suggestive for an educational role of this tool in subjects at high risk level