Four Industries That Blockchain Will Revolutionize

Four Industries That Blockchain Will Revolutionize

Four Industries That Blockchain Will Revolutionize

Small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) were dependent on larger enterprises as credit cycles were not under their control. Payments used to get a delay, and the credit terms as stated in the contracts were also not honored by few parties. Here blockchain can resolve this issue as the smart agreements is based on consensus among parties.

The industries that can be benefitted from this technology are mentioned below: https://goo.gl/jtGLEa

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6 years ago

Expanding DevOps Strategy for Smarter Business Applications

Patrick Debois coined the term DevOps, which is described as an integrated approach of software development teams as well as IT operation teams working collaboratively in achieving the specific task. With evolvement in technologies, it has become the key focus in reforming the future of the software industry, and its recognition is going to peak in 2018.

Expanding DevOps Strategy For Smarter Business Applications

In practice, to achieve DevOps effectively, the developed software should meet certain architecturally requirement standards such as modifiable, monitor ability, feasibility, and deploy ability in an acceptable limit and effective manner.

Complete Article Here: Expanding DevOps Strategy for Smarter Business Applications


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6 years ago

Microsoft pursues botnet herders via Russian newspapers http://☀.co.cc/iQq2e5

6 years ago

Trending AI Technologies That Will Dominate in 2019

Trending AI Technologies That Will Dominate In 2019

Artificial Intelligence (AI) has shown a tremendous transformation in healthcare, education, manufacturing, and almost all other sectors. AI products are gradually infiltrating homes and workplaces. This is raising concerns regarding the effects of AI on the job market; ArtificiaI Intelligence is transforming the lives and is only scaling the human mind and not replacing it.

Let’s have a look at Top Technologies To Watch Out In 2019


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6 years ago

Travelmate: A New Voyage through Robotics

The combination of Artificial Intelligence and robotics in and outside the factory to automate tasks is indeed powerful. AI has begun to witness an increasingly common presence in robotic solutions in recent years, which has introduced flexibility and ability to learn in previously rigid applications. 

Although AI is still at its beginnings, for some applications in the production sector, it has been a transformative technology although many are to experience its effect. Many companies have created innovations in this regard.

Read More: Travel Mate Robotics

Among them, Travelmate Robotics is one of the world’s leading robotic companies best known for their robotic case. By redefining “smart” consumer products, the company has truly innovated and disrupted the emerging IoT paradigm. By creating a robot with valuable cases, Travelmate has disrupted the market. 

They have invented a robot suitcase which follows the customer as they move. The experience is like following the customer on a voyage by a dedicated butler


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6 years ago

Top Emerging IoT Trends that will Become Mainstream

The development in innovations like Artificial Intelligence, Blockchain technology, Cloud and Big Data are catering to the events in this advanced age. IoT is aiding in various sectors be it healthcare where it is providing world-class treatment with advanced tools and techniques and also to the development of smart cities where autonomous vehicles will eliminate car crashes.  Enterprises are adopting these trends to lead the digital revolution in their business.

Top Emerging IoT Trends That Will Become Mainstream

• Artificial Intelligence

According to a survey by Gartner, 59 percent of organizations are still assembling data on Artificial Intelligence methodologies, whereas 31 percent have gained acceptance through test cases programs; the IT department is investing vigorously in AI. Regardless of these difficulties, it will be easy to accomplish great outcomes with AI in an extensive variety of IoT circumstances.

Keep Reading


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6 years ago

Suggested: Cyber Security Predictions to Safeguard your Businesses

Source: Cybersecurity APAC 

Brain Waves Can be Used to Detect Potentially Harmful Personal Information

Cyber security and authentication have been under attack in recent months as, seemingly every other day, a new report of hackers gaining access to private or sensitive information comes to light. Just recently, more than 500 million passwords were stolen when Yahoo revealed its security was compromised.

Brain Waves Can Be Used To Detect Potentially Harmful Personal Information

Securing systems has gone beyond simply coming up with a clever password that could prevent nefarious computer experts from hacking into your Facebook account. The more sophisticated the system, or the more critical, private information that system holds, the more advanced the identification system protecting it becomes.

Fingerprint scans and iris identification are just two types of authentication methods, once thought of as science fiction, that are in wide use by the most secure systems. But fingerprints can be stolen and iris scans can be replicated. Nothing has proven foolproof from being subject to computer hackers.

“The principal argument for behavioral, biometric authentication is that standard modes of authentication, like a password, authenticates you once before you access the service,” said Abdul Serwadda a cybersecurity expert and assistant professor in the Department of Computer Science at Texas Tech University.

“Now, once you’ve accessed the service, there is no other way for the system to still know it is you. The system is blind as to who is using the service. So the area of behavioral authentication looks at other user-identifying patterns that can keep the system aware of the person who is using it. Through such patterns, the system can keep track of some confidence metric about who might be using it and immediately prompt for reentry of the password whenever the confidence metric falls below a certain threshold.”

One of those patterns that is growing in popularity within the research community is the use of brain waves obtained from an electroencephalogram, or EEG. Several research groups around the country have recently showcased systems which use EEG to authenticate users with very high accuracy.

However, those brain waves can tell more about a person than just his or her identity. It could reveal medical, behavioral or emotional aspects of a person that, if brought to light, could be embarrassing or damaging to that person. And with EEG devices becoming much more affordable, accurate and portable and applications being designed that allows people to more readily read an EEG scan, the likelihood of that happening is dangerously high.

“The EEG has become a commodity application. For $100 you can buy an EEG device that fits on your head just like a pair of headphones,” Serwadda said. “Now there are apps on the market, brain-sensing apps where you can buy the gadget, download the app on your phone and begin to interact with the app using your brain signals. That led us to think; now we have these brain signals that were traditionally accessed only by doctors being handled by regular people. Now anyone who can write an app can get access to users’ brain signals and try to manipulate them to discover what is going on.”

That’s where Serwadda and graduate student Richard Matovu focused their attention: attempting to see if certain traits could be gleaned from a person’s brain waves. They presented their findings recently to the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) International Conference on Biometrics.

Brain waves and cybersecurity

Serwadda said the technology is still evolving in terms of being able to use a person’s brain waves for authentication purposes. But it is a heavily researched field that has drawn the attention of several federal organizations. The National Science Foundation (NSF), funds a three-year project on which Serwadda and others from Syracuse University and the University of Alabama-Birmingham are exploring how several behavioral modalities, including EEG brain patterns, could be leveraged to augment traditional user authentication mechanisms.

“There are no installations yet, but a lot of research is going on to see if EEG patterns could be incorporated into standard behavioral authentication procedures,” Serwadda said.

Assuming a system uses EEG as the modality for user authentication, typically for such a system, all variables have been optimized to maximize authentication accuracy. A selection of such variables would include:

The features used to build user templates.      

The signal frequency ranges from which features are extracted

The regions of the brain on which the electrodes are placed, among other variables.

Under this assumption of a finely tuned authentication system, Serwadda and his colleagues tackled the following questions:

If a malicious entity were to somehow access templates from this authentication-optimized system, would he or she be able to exploit these templates to infer non-authentication-centric information about the users with high accuracy?

In the event that such inferences are possible, which attributes of template design could reduce or increase the threat?

Turns out, they indeed found EEG authentication systems to give away non-authentication-centric information. Using an authentication system from UC-Berkeley and a variant of another from a team at Binghamton University and the University of Buffalo, Serwadda and Matovu tested their hypothesis, using alcoholism as the sensitive private information which an adversary might want to infer from EEG authentication templates.

In a study involving 25 formally diagnosed alcoholics and 25 non-alcoholic subjects, the lowest error rate obtained when identifying alcoholics was 25 percent, meaning a classification accuracy of approximately 75 percent.

When they tweaked the system and changed several variables, they found that the ability to detect alcoholic behavior could be tremendously reduced at the cost of slightly reducing the performance of the EEG authentication system.

Motivation for discovery

Serwadda’s motivation for proving brain waves could be used to reveal potentially harmful personal information wasn’t to improve the methods for obtaining that information. It’s to prevent it.

To illustrate, he gives an analogy using fingerprint identification at an airport. Fingerprint scans read ridges and valleys on the finger to determine a person’s unique identity, and that’s it.

In a hypothetical scenario where such systems could only function accurately if the user’s finger was pricked and some blood drawn from it, this would be problematic because the blood drawn by the prick could be used to infer things other than the user’s identity, such as whether a person suffers from certain diseases, such as diabetes.

Given the amount of extra information that EEG authentication systems are able glean about the user, current EEG systems could be likened to the hypothetical fingerprint reader that pricks the user’s finger. Serwadda wants to drive research that develops EEG authentication systems that perform the intended purpose while revealing minimal information about traits other than the user’s identity in authentication terms.

Currently, in the vast majority of studies on the EEG authentication problem, researchers primarily seek to outdo each other in terms of the system error rates. They work with the central objective of designing a system having error rates which are much lower than the state-of-the-art. Whenever a research group develops or publishes an EEG authentication system that attains the lowest error rates, such a system is immediately installed as the reference point.

A critical question that has not seen much attention up to this point is how certain design attributes of these systems, in other words the kinds of features used to formulate the user template, might relate to their potential to leak sensitive personal information. If, for example, a system with the lowest authentication error rates comes with the added baggage of leaking a significantly higher amount of private information, then such a system might, in practice, not be as useful as its low error rates suggest. Users would only accept, and get the full utility of the system, if the potential privacy breaches associated with the system are well understood and appropriate mitigations undertaken.

But, Serwadda said, while the EEG is still being studied, the next wave of invention is already beginning.

“In light of the privacy challenges seen with the EEG, it is noteworthy that the next wave of technology after the EEG is already being developed,” Serwadda said. “One of those technologies is functional near-infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS), which has a much higher signal-to-noise ratio than an EEG. It gives a more accurate picture of brain activity given its ability to focus on a particular region of the brain.”

The good news, for now, is fNIRS technology is still quite expensive; however there is every likelihood that the prices will drop over time, potentially leading to a civilian application to this technology. Thanks to the efforts of researchers like Serwadda, minimizing the leakage of sensitive personal information through these technologies is beginning to gain attention in the research community.

“The basic idea behind this research is to motivate a direction of research which selects design parameters in such a way that we not only care about recognizing users very accurately but also care about minimizing the amount of sensitive personal information it can read,” Serwadda said.


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6 years ago
“Radio Power Will Revolutionize The World.” Modern Mechanix Publishing Co., Greenwich, Connecticut.

“Radio Power will Revolutionize the World.” Modern Mechanix Publishing Co., Greenwich, Connecticut. July, 1934.

6 years ago

Trends that will redefine banking

Trends That Will Redefine Banking

Banking organizations become more comfortable with a faster pace of innovation, using data and analytics more extensively. Digitization drives banks to be more innovative in targeting, expanding services, re-configuring delivery channels, and integrating payments.

 Following are some of the trends that define banking today: https://goo.gl/c4eViv


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6 years ago

I survived by telling myself ‘I’ll kill myself tomorrow but not today.’ I kept putting it off for days and days and days with the hope that the darkness will leave my body one of these days. and some days, it leaves and some days, it stays. I’m still surviving and that’s the sad truth and maybe I’ll kill myself tomorrow but not today.

Juansen Dizon, Magic Mantra (via juansendizon)

5 years ago
Effective BI Adoption
Business Intelligence is categorized into the “challenging” section in terms of adoption in an organization, compared to its transactional…

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