Filtern
Erscheinungsjahr
- 2020 (73) (entfernen)
Dokumenttyp
Volltext vorhanden
- nein (73) (entfernen)
Schlagworte
- Arzneimittel (1)
- BIM (1)
- BSM (1)
- Bodily sensation maps (1)
- Depression (1)
- Digitalisierung (1)
- EZB (1)
- Emotion induction (1)
- Energiewende (1)
- Europäische Zentralbank (1)
- Fluch (1)
- Geldpolitik (1)
- Gesellschaft Technische Gebäudeausrüstung (1)
- Hydrogen evolution reaction (1)
- IAPS (1)
- IFC (1)
- Klimaschutz (1)
- MITRE (1)
- Medication (1)
- OSINT (1)
- PEM water electrolysis (1)
- PtCoMn (1)
- Replication (1)
- Sportpolitik (1)
- Sportsoziologie (1)
- Sportökonomie (1)
- Stadtentwicklung (1)
- TGA (1)
- Ternary alloy catalyst preparation (1)
- advanced persistent threats (1)
- antecedents (1)
- compassionate love (1)
- cyber kill chain (1)
- efficiency of exciton transfer (1)
- excitation energy transfer (1)
- measurement study (1)
- narcissism (1)
- phishing (1)
- reconnaissance (1)
- servant leadership (1)
- vibronic coupling (1)
Institut
- Wirtschaftsrecht (22)
- Westfälisches Institut für Gesundheit (6)
- Elektrotechnik und angewandte Naturwissenschaften (5)
- Westfälisches Energieinstitut (5)
- Wirtschaft Gelsenkirchen (5)
- Informatik und Kommunikation (4)
- Institut für biologische und chemische Informatik (3)
- Wirtschaft und Informationstechnik Bocholt (3)
- Institut Arbeit und Technik (1)
- Maschinenbau und Facilities Management (1)
Allgemeines Verwaltungsrecht
(2020)
With ongoing developments in the field of smart cities and digitalization in general, data is becoming a driving factor and value stream for new and existing economies alike. However, there exists an increasing centralization and monopolization of data holders and service providers, especially in the form of the big US-based technology companies in the western world and central technology providers with close ties to the government in the Asian regions. Self Sovereign Identity (SSI) provides the technical building blocks to create decentralized data-driven systems, which bring data autonomy back to the users. In this paper we propose a system in which the combination of SSI and token economy based incentivisation strategies makes it possible to unlock the potential value of data-pools without compromising the data autonomy of the users.
This paper analyses the status quo of large-scale decision making combined with the possibility of blockchain as an underlying decentralized architecture to govern common pool resources in a collective manner and evaluates them according to their requirements and features (technical and non-technical). Due to an increasing trend in the distribution of knowledge and an increasing amount of information, the combination of these decentralized technologies and approaches, can not only be beneficial for consortial governance using blockchain but can also help communities to govern common goods and resources. Blockchain and its trust-enhancing properties can potenitally be a catalysator for more collaborative behavior among participants and may lead to new insights about collective action and CPRs.
Ergänzend zu den Befunden von Klauk (2019; Intelligenzdiagnostik bei überwiegend Nicht-EU-Migrantinnen und -Migranten), wird in diesem Übersichtsartikel Rekurs genommen auf die Bedeutung der Intelligenz zur Vorhersage von Berufserfolgskriterien im Kontext von Migrationserfahrungen. Ferner werden die bei Klauk nicht im Fokus stehenden Kernelemente der Potenzial- und Kompetenzerfassung skizziert, inklusive berufsrelevanter Personenmerkmale und Interessen. Durch Zuwanderung erhöht sich die Diversität in der Gesellschaft, ggf. auch in Unternehmen, daher werden hier bedeutsame Aspekte der Diversität in Arbeitsgruppen, insbesondere Stereotype, kurz erläutert. Der Artikel schließt mit einigen Handlungsimpulsen und Ausblicken auf zukünftige Forschung.
In the modern Web, service providers often rely heavily on third parties to run their services. For example, they make use of ad networks to finance their services, externally hosted libraries to develop features quickly, and analytics providers to gain insights into visitor behavior.
For security and privacy, website owners need to be aware of the content they provide their users. However, in reality, they often do not know which third parties are embedded, for example, when these third parties request additional content as it is common in real-time ad auctions.
In this paper, we present a large-scale measurement study to analyze the magnitude of these new challenges. To better reflect the connectedness of third parties, we measured their relations in a model we call third party trees, which reflects an approximation of the loading dependencies of all third parties embedded into a given website. Using this concept, we show that including a single third party can lead to subsequent requests from up to eight additional services. Furthermore, our findings indicate that the third parties embedded on a page load are not always deterministic, as 50 % of the branches in the third party trees change between repeated visits. In addition, we found that 93 % of the analyzed websites embedded third parties that are located in regions that might not be in line with the current legal framework. Our study also replicates previous work that mostly focused on landing pages of websites. We show that this method is only able to measure a lower bound as subsites show a significant increase of privacy-invasive techniques. For example, our results show an increase of used cookies by about 36 % when crawling websites more deeply.