Fakultät Medien (M) (ab 22.04.2021)
Refine
Year of publication
- 2022 (137) (remove)
Document Type
- Bachelor Thesis (35)
- Part of a Book (22)
- Other (20)
- Master's Thesis (15)
- Conference Proceeding (13)
- Article (unreviewed) (13)
- Working Paper (7)
- Article (reviewed) (6)
- Book (5)
- Contribution to a Periodical (1)
Conference Type
- Konferenzartikel (11)
- Konferenz-Abstract (1)
- Sonstiges (1)
Keywords
- COVID-19 (8)
- Digitalisierung (7)
- Webentwicklung (6)
- Entrepreneurship (5)
- JavaScript (5)
- Marketing (3)
- Social Media (3)
- Computersicherheit (2)
- Cyberangriffe (2)
- Digitale Lehre (2)
Institute
Open Access
- Closed (70)
- Closed Access (38)
- Open Access (29)
- Diamond (10)
- Bronze (8)
- Grün (2)
- Hybrid (2)
Generative machine learning models for creative purposes play an increasingly prominent role in the field of dance and technology. A particularly popular approach is the use of such models for generating synthetic motions. Such motions can either serve as source of ideation for choreographers or control an artificial dancer that acts as improvisation partner for human dancers. Several examples employ autoencoder-based deep-learning architectures that have been trained on motion capture recordings of human dancers. Synthetic motions are then generated by navigating the autoencoder's latent space. This paper proposes an alternative approach of using an autoencoder for creating synthetic motions. This approach controls the generation of synthetic motions on the level of the motion itself rather than its encoding. Two different methods are presented that follow this principle. Both methods are based on the interactive control of a single joint of an artificial dancer while the other joints remain under the control of the autoencoder. The first method combines the control of the orientation of a joint with iterative autoencoding. The second method combines the control of the target position of a joint with forward kinematics and the application of latent difference vectors. As illustrative example of an artistic application, this latter method is used for an artificial dancer that plays a digital instrument. The paper presents the implementation of these two methods and provides some preliminary results.
Privacy is the capacity to keep some things private despite their social repercussions. It relates to a person’s capacity to control the amount, time, and circumstances under which they disclose sensitive personal information, such as a person’s physiology, psychology, or intelligence. In the age of data exploitation, privacy has become even more crucial. Our privacy is now more threatened than it was 20 years ago, outside of science and technology, due to the way data and technology highly used. Both the kinds and amounts of information about us and the methods for tracking and identifying us have grown a lot in recent years. It is a known security concern that human and machine systems face privacy threats. There are various disagreements over privacy and security; every person and group has a unique perspective on how the two are related. Even though 79% of the study’s results showed that legal or compliance issues were more important, 53% of the survey team thought that privacy and security were two separate things. Data security and privacy are interconnected, despite their distinctions. Data security and data privacy are linked with each other; both are necessary for the other to exist. Data may be physically kept anywhere, on our computers or in the cloud, but only humans have authority over it. Machine learning has been used to solve the problem for our easy solution. We are linked to our data. Protect against attackers by protecting data, which also protects privacy. Attackers commonly utilize both mechanical systems and social engineering techniques to enter a target network. The vulnerability of this form of attack rests not only in the technology but also in the human users, making it extremely difficult to fight against. The best option to secure privacy is to combine humans and machines in the form of a Human Firewall and a Machine Firewall. A cryptographic route like Tor is a superior choice for discouraging attackers from trying to access our system and protecting the privacy of our data There is a case study of privacy and security issues in this thesis. The problems and different kinds of attacks on people and machines will then be briefly talked about. We will explain how Human Firewalls and machine learning on the Tor network protect our privacy from attacks such as social engineering and attacks on mechanical systems. As a real-world test, we will use genomic data to try out a privacy attack called the Membership Inference Attack (MIA). We’ll show Machine Firewall as a way to protect ourselves, and then we’ll use Differential Privacy (DP), which has already been done. We applied the method of Lasso and convolutional neural networks (CNN), which are both popular machine learning models, as the target models. Our findings demonstrate a logarithmic link between the desired model accuracy and the privacy budget.
We aim to debate and eventually be able to carefully judge how realistic the following statement of a young computer scientist is: “I would like to become an ethical correctly acting offensive cybersecurity expert”. The objective of this article is not to judge what is good and what is wrong behavior nor to present an overall solution to ethical dilemmas. Instead, the goal is to become aware of the various personal moral dilemmas a security expert may face during his work life. For this, a total of 14 cybersecurity students from HS Offenburg were asked to evaluate several case studies according to different ethical frameworks. The results and particularities are discussed, considering different ethical frameworks. We emphasize, that different ethical frameworks can lead to different preferred actions and that the moral understanding of the frameworks may differ even from student to student.
In den letzten Jahren haben Recommender Systeme zunehmend an Bedeutung gewonnen. Diese Systeme sind meist für Bereiche des E-Commerce konzipiert und berücksichtigen oftmals nicht den aktuellen Kontext der nutzenden Person. Recommender Systeme können allerdings nicht nur im E-Commerce zum Einsatz kommen, sondern finden ihren Anwendungszweck auch im Gesundheitswesen. Ziel dieser Bachelorarbeit ist es, ein Recommender System zu entwickeln, das den aktuellen Kontext der nutzenden Person (Chatverlauf, demografische Daten) besser berücksichtigen kann. Dazu befasst sich diese Arbeit mit der Konzeption und prototypischen Umsetzung eines kontextsensitiven Recommender Systems für einen bereits existierenden Chatbot aus dem Gesundheitswesen. Das in dieser Arbeit konzipierte und entwickelte Recommender System soll Mitarbeitende aus dem Gesundheits- und Sozialwesen entlasten und ihnen hilfreiche sowie thematisch sinnvolle Informationen zur Verfügung stellen. Basierend auf festgelegten Anforderungen wurde ein Konzept für das Recommender System entwickelt und zu Teilen als Prototyp umgesetzt. Abschließend wurde der Prototyp im Hinblick auf die Anforderungen evaluiert. Zudem fand eine technische Evaluation und eine Evaluation mithilfe von Anwendenden statt, welche den implementierten Prototypen bereits existierenden Systemen gegenüberstellte. Die von dem Prototyp empfohlenen Textausschnitte erzielten in der Evaluation mit nutzenden Personen eine thematisch signifikant höhere Übereinstimmung mit den Chatdaten.
Publisher und Start-ups
(2022)
Organizations striving to achieve success in the long term must have a positive brand image which will have direct implications on the business. In the face of the rising cyber threats and intense competition, maintaining a threat-free domain is an important aspect of preserving that image in today's internet world. Domain names are often near-synonyms for brand names for numerous companies. There are likely thousands of domains that try to impersonate the big companies in a bid to trap unsuspecting users, usually falling prey to attacks such as phishing or watering hole. Because domain names are important for organizations for running their business online, they are also particularly vulnerable to misuse by malicious actors. So, how can you ensure that your domain name is protected while still protecting your brand identity? Brand Monitoring, for example, may assist. The term "Brand Monitoring" applies only to keep tabs on an organization's brand performance, reception, and overall online presence through various online channels and platforms [1]. There has been a rise in the need of maintaining one's domain clear of any linkages to malicious activities as the threat environment has expanded. Since attackers are targeting domain names of organizations and luring unsuspecting users to visit malicious websites, domain monitoring becomes an important aspect. Another important aspect of brand abuse is how attackers leverage brand logos in creating fake and phishing web pages. In this Master Thesis, we try to solve the problem of classification of impersonated domains using rule-based and machine learning algorithms and automation of domain monitoring. We first use a rule-based classifier and Machine Learning algorithms to classify the domains gathered into two buckets – "Parked" and "Non-Parked". In the project's second phase, we will deploy object detection models (Scale Invariant Feature Transform - SIFT and Multi-Template Matching – MTM) to detect brand logos from the domains of interest.
Even though the internet has only been there for a short period, it has grown tremendously. To- day, a significant portion of commerce is conducted entirely online because of increased inter- net users and technological advancements in web construction. Additionally, cyberattacks and threats have expanded significantly, leading to financial losses, privacy breaches, identity theft, a decrease in customers’ confidence in online banking and e-commerce, and a decrease in brand reputation and trust. When an attacker pretends to be a genuine and trustworthy institution, they can steal private and confidential information from a victim. Aside from that, phishing has been an ongoing issue for a long time. Billions of dollars have been shed on the global economy. In recent years, there has been significant progress in the development of phishing detection and identification systems to protect against phishing attacks. Phishing detection technologies frequently produce binary results, i.e., whether a phishing attempt was made or not, with no explanation. On the other hand, phishing identification methodologies identify phishing web- pages by visually comparing webpages with predetermined authentic references and reporting phishing together with its target brand, resulting in findings that are understandable. However, technical difficulties in the field of visual analysis limit the applicability of currently available solutions, preventing them from being both effective (with high accuracy) and efficient (with little runtime overhead). Here, we evaluate existed framework called Phishpedia. This hybrid deep learning system can recognize identity logos from webpage screenshots and match logo variants of the same brand with high precision. Phishpedia provides high accuracy with low run- time. Lastly, unlike other methods, Phishpedia does not require training on any phishing sam- ples whatsoever. Phishpedia exceeds baseline identification techniques (EMD, PhishZoo, and LogoSENSE), inaccurately detecting phishing pages in lengthy testing using accurate phishing data. The effectiveness of Phishpedia was tested and compared against other standard machine learning algorithms and some state-of-the-art algorithms. The given solutions performed better than different algorithms in the given dataset, which is impressive.
Technology advancement has played a vital role in business development; however, it has opened a broad attack surface. Passwords are one of the essential concepts used in applications for authentication. Companies manage many corporate applications, so the employees must meet the password criteria, which leads to password fatigue. This thesis addressed this issue and how we can overcome this problem by theoretically implementing an IAM solution. In this, we disused MFA, SSO, biometrics, strong password policies and access control. We introduced the IAM framework that should be considered while implementing the IAM solution. Implementing an IAM solution adds an extra layer of security.
Server Side Rendering (SSR), Single Page Application (SPA), and Static Site Generation (SSG) are the three most popular ways of making modern Web applications today. If we go deep into these processes, this can be helpful for the developers and clients. Developers benefit since they do not need to learn other programming languages and can instead utilize their own experience to build different kinds of Web applications; for example, a developer can use only JavaScript in the three approaches. On the other hand, clients can give their users a better experience.
This Master Thesis’s purpose was to compare these processes with a demo application for each and give users a solid understanding of which process they should follow. We discussed the step-by-step process of making three applications in the above mentioned categories. Then we compared those based on criteria such as performance, security, Search Engine Optimization, developer preference, learning curve, content and purpose of the Web, user interface, and user experience. It also talked about the technologies such as JavaScript, React, Node.js, and Next.js, and why and where to use them. The goals we specified before the program creation were fulfilled and can be validated by comparing the solutions we gave for user problems, which was the application’s primary purpose.