Search for dissertations about: "Simone Fischer-Hübner"
Showing result 6 - 10 of 27 swedish dissertations containing the words Simone Fischer-Hübner.
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6. Usable privacy for digital transactions : Exploring the usability aspects of three privacy enhancing mechanisms
Abstract : The amount of personal identifiable information that people distribute over different online services has grown rapidly and considerably over the last decades. This has led to increased probabilities for identity theft, profiling and linkability attacks, which can in turn not only result in a threat to people’s personal dignity, finances, and many other aspects of their lives, but also to societies in general. READ MORE
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7. Inter-temporal Privacy Metrics
Abstract : Informational privacy of individuals has significantly gained importance after information technology has become widely deployed. Data, once digitalised, can be copied, distributed, and long-term stored at negligible costs. READ MORE
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8. Towards Inter-temporal Privacy Metrics
Abstract : Informational privacy of individuals has significantly gained importance after information technology has become widely deployed. Data, once digitalised, can be copied and distributed at negligible costs. This has dramatic consequences for individuals that leave traces in form of personal data whenever they interact with information technology. READ MORE
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9. Privacy Analysis and Protocols for Decentralized Online Social Networks
Abstract : Decentralized Online Social Networks (DOSNs) are evolving as a promising approach to mitigate design-inherent privacy flaws of logically centralized services such as Facebook, Google+ or Twitter. Common approaches to implement a DOSN build upon a peer-to-peer (P2P) architecture in order to avoid the central aggregation of sensitive user data at one provider-controlled location. READ MORE
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10. Towards Usable Privacy and Identity Management for Smart Environments
Abstract : Smart environments provide users with a large number of new services that will improve their lives, however, they also have the potential for collecting staggering amounts of personal information, which, if misused, poses a multitude of privacy threats to users ranging from identification, tracking, stalking, monitoring and profiling. Consequently, the users’ right to informational self-determination is at stake in smart environments. READ MORE