912 research outputs found
Chinese Manufacturing Performance from Multilateral Perspective: 1980-2004
Based on our research work of 1998, we discuss Chinese manufacturing performance from multilateral perspective in 1980-2004 through performing the comparison of labour productivity between China and its trade partners so as to better understand the problems of RMB exchange rate. We talk about Chinese manufacturing competitiveness through the multilateral comparison of PPPs, relative price levels, labor productivity and ULCs, with the PPPs being standardized according to the base year 1997. All of the results are compared with those in the year 1987. The following findings are presented: in Chinese manufacturing, the various PPPs in the base year 1997 are approximately 3.7 yuan/international $. After the middle 1980s, the relative price turns the lowest in all the five investigation countries. Furthermore, it is still trending downward. ULC is declining albeit the fluctuations. In the 1980s, there is no "catch-up" rapid growth in labor productivity. However, after 1992, it has shown a distinct "catch-up", though with the low level.Multilateral comparison, Manufacturing, International competitiveness
Social Turing Tests: Crowdsourcing Sybil Detection
As popular tools for spreading spam and malware, Sybils (or fake accounts)
pose a serious threat to online communities such as Online Social Networks
(OSNs). Today, sophisticated attackers are creating realistic Sybils that
effectively befriend legitimate users, rendering most automated Sybil detection
techniques ineffective. In this paper, we explore the feasibility of a
crowdsourced Sybil detection system for OSNs. We conduct a large user study on
the ability of humans to detect today's Sybil accounts, using a large corpus of
ground-truth Sybil accounts from the Facebook and Renren networks. We analyze
detection accuracy by both "experts" and "turkers" under a variety of
conditions, and find that while turkers vary significantly in their
effectiveness, experts consistently produce near-optimal results. We use these
results to drive the design of a multi-tier crowdsourcing Sybil detection
system. Using our user study data, we show that this system is scalable, and
can be highly effective either as a standalone system or as a complementary
technique to current tools
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