|
|
Showing 1 - 5 of
5 matches in All Departments
As depicted in David Lodge's celebrated novel Small World, the
perceived size of our world experienced a progressive decrease as
jet airplanes became affordable to ever greater shares of the
earth's population. Yet, the really dramatic shrinking had to wait
until the mid-1990s, when Internet became widespread and the
information age stopped being an empty buzzword. But small is not
necessarily beautiful. We now live in a global village and, alas,
some (often very powerful) voices state that we ought not expect
any more privacy in it. Should this be true, we would have created
our own nightmare: a global village combining the worst of
conventional villages, where a lot of information on an individual
is known by the other villagers, and conventional big cities, where
the invidual feels lost in a grim and potentially dangerous place.
Whereas security is essential for organizations to survive,
individuals and so- times even companies also need some privacy to
develop comfortably and lead a free life. This is the reason why
individual privacy is mentioned in the Univ- sal Declaration of
Human Rights (1948) and data privacy is protected by law in most
Western countries. Indeed, without privacy, the rest of fundamental
rights, like freedom of speech and democracy, are impaired. The
outstanding challenge is to create technology that implements those
legal guarantees in a way compatible with functionality and
security. This book edited by Dr. Javier Herranz and Dr.
This book constitutes the proceedings of the Second International
Conference on Citizen Sensor Networks, CitiSens 2013, held in
Barcelona, Spain, in September 2013. The 8 papers presented in this
volume were carefully reviewed and selected from 16 submissions.
The topics covered are: trajectory mining, smart cities,
multi-agents systems, networks simulation, smart sensors and
clustering or data anonymization.
As depicted in David Lodge's celebrated novel Small World, the
perceived size of our world experienced a progressive decrease as
jet airplanes became affordable to ever greater shares of the
earth's population. Yet, the really dramatic shrinking had to wait
until the mid-1990s, when Internet became widespread and the
information age stopped being an empty buzzword. But small is not
necessarily beautiful. We now live in a global village and, alas,
some (often very powerful) voices state that we ought not expect
any more privacy in it. Should this be true, we would have created
our own nightmare: a global village combining the worst of
conventional villages, where a lot of information on an individual
is known by the other villagers, and conventional big cities, where
the invidual feels lost in a grim and potentially dangerous place.
Whereas security is essential for organizations to survive,
individuals and so- times even companies also need some privacy to
develop comfortably and lead a free life. This is the reason why
individual privacy is mentioned in the Univ- sal Declaration of
Human Rights (1948) and data privacy is protected by law in most
Western countries. Indeed, without privacy, the rest of fundamental
rights, like freedom of speech and democracy, are impaired. The
outstanding challenge is to create technology that implements those
legal guarantees in a way compatible with functionality and
security. This book edited by Dr. Javier Herranz and Dr.
|
Modeling Decisions for Artificial Intelligence - 17th International Conference, MDAI 2020, Sant Cugat, Spain, September 2-4, 2020, Proceedings (Paperback, 1st ed. 2020)
Vicenc Torra, Yasuo Narukawa, Jordi Nin, Nuria Agell
|
R1,413
Discovery Miles 14 130
|
Ships in 18 - 22 working days
|
This book constitutes the refereed proceedings of the 17th
International Conference on Modeling Decisions for Artificial
Intelligence, MDAI 2020, held in Sant Cugat, Spain, in September
2020.* The 24 papers presented in this volume were carefully
reviewed and selected from 46 submissions. They discuss different
facets of decision processes in a broad sense and present research
in data science, data privacy, aggregation functions, human
decision making, graphs and social networks, and recommendation and
search. The papers are organized in the following topical sections:
aggregation operators and decision making, and data science and
data mining. * The conference was canceled due to the COVID-19
pandemic.
This book constitutes the thoroughly refereed post-conference
proceedings of the First International Workshop on Citizen Sensor
Networks, CitiSens 2012, in Montpellier, France, on August 27,
2012.
The 7 revised full papers presented together with 1 keynote
lectures were carefully reviewed and selected from 16 submissions.
The accepted papers deal with topics like crowdsourcing, smart
cities, multi-agent systems, privacy in social networks, data
anonymity or smart sensors.
|
|