Results 41 to 50 of about 314 (141)
Deniable Attribute Based Encryption for Branching Programs from LWE [PDF]
Deniable encryption (Canetti et al. CRYPTO \u2797) is an intriguing primitive that provides a security guarantee against not only eavesdropping attacks as required by semantic security, but also stronger coercion attacks performed after the fact.
Feng-Hao Liu, Daniel Apon, Xiong Fan
core +1 more source
THE REVOLUTIONARY'S TWO TEMPORALITIES? Activism, Failure, and Uneventing
ABSTRACT Radical activists assess actions both for their relatively immediate effects and for their potential longer‐term consequences. Provisional failures can become resources for future victories, while erstwhile successes can dissolve after apparent achievement. Drawing from ethnography with Burmese revolutionaries, this article shows how activists
ELLIOTT PRASSE‐FREEMAN
wiley +1 more source
ABSTRACT Recent philosophy of language has seen a growing interest in what is often called the dynamics of conversation or conversational scorekeeping, that is, the ways in which speech and context mutually interact in the course of a conversation.
Lars Dänzer +2 more
wiley +1 more source
On Implementing Deniable Storage Encryption for Mobile Devices. [PDF]
Data confidentiality can be effectively preserved through encryption. In certain situations, this is inadequate, as users may be coerced into disclosing their decryption keys. In this case, the data must be hidden so that its very existence can be denied.
Skillen, Adam, Mannan, Mohammad
openaire +3 more sources
Humour as a Pedagogical Tool: Evidence and Implications for Critical Geography
Abstract In this article, we elaborate the results of a focused empirical study on the use of humour in teaching undergraduate geography courses. Through semi‐structured interviews and weekly reflections submitted by students, we delve into a diverse array of experiences and perceptions of humour as a pedagogical tool.
Ben A. Gerlofs, Xuechao Zheng
wiley +1 more source
Abstract Artificial intelligence (AI) hiring systems (AHSs) are used by employers every day to screen and shortlist job candidates. Despite this, substantial gaps exist in our understanding of the real – as opposed to theoretical – risks of discrimination when these systems are deployed.
NATALIE SHEARD
wiley +1 more source
Deniable encryption is an important that allows a user (a sender and/or a receiver) to escape a coercion attempted by a coercive adversary. Such an adversary approaches the coerced user after transmission forcing him to reveal all his random inputs used during encryption or decryption.
openaire +1 more source
Abstract The 2020 Black Lives Matter (BLM) protests were a stark reminder of the reality of problematic ‘race’ relations. This paper, originally conceived in the aftermath of George Floyd's murder with his final words ‘I can't breathe!’, examines the psychoanalysis of anti‐black racism as a contemporary problem to address.
Fembe Nanji‐Rowe
wiley +1 more source
On the Impossibility of Sender-Deniable Public Key Encryption [PDF]
The primitive of deniable encryption was first introduced by Canetti et al. (CRYPTO, 1997). Deniable encryption is a regular public key encryption scheme with the added feature that after running the protocol honestly and transmitting a message $m ...
Dana Dachman-Soled
core
Causal Inference With Observational Data and Unobserved Confounding Variables
As ecology tackles progressively larger problems, we are moving beyond the scales at which randomised controlled experiments are feasible. Using observational data for causal inference raises the problem of confounding variables, those affecting both a causal variable and response of interest, which can create bias when not measured and omitted from ...
Jarrett E. K. Byrnes, Laura E. Dee
wiley +1 more source

