Beiträge: Harald Hauff, Michael Niedermeier, Martin Münch und Hermann de Meer: IT-Sicherheit – eine Kompetenzpartnerschaft für die Wirtschaft Marit Hansen: Datenschutz im Web 2.0 – ein Auslaufmodell? Marit Hansen: Privacy 2.0 – Ein Reality-Check Manuel Koschuch, Johann Großschädl, Matthias Hudler und Michael Krüger: Mit Sicherheit! – Vertrauen ist gut, ist Kryptographie besser? Manuel Koschuch, Johann Großschädl, Matthias Hudler und Michael Krüger: Sicherheit trotz Mobilität – Starke Kryptographie für schwache Geräte Horst Greifeneder: Sicherheitsmaßnahmen bei Anzeigenwerbung im Internet Horst Greifeneder: Klick Forensik gegen Klickbetrug in der Suchmaschinenwerbung Marcus Junker: Sicherheit in Firmennetzwerken Marcus Junker: Intranet-Sicherheit – Gefahren und Schutzmaßnahmen Markus Ullmann: Allgegenwärtige drahtlose Sensornetze – Technologie, Einsatzgebiete, Sicherheit Markus Ullmann: Das drahtlose Schlüsselbrett
Hermann de Meer Bücher



Quality of service
- 400 Seiten
- 14 Lesestunden
The book covers a range of topics related to Quality of Service (QoS) and network management, including an invited program and full papers addressing various aspects of service-oriented architectures, self-organized networks, and overlay networks. It discusses high-throughput multicast infrastructures, transport layer adaptations in heterogeneous wireless networks, and frameworks aimed at improving TCP performance over lossy channels. The analysis includes QoS guarantees in multimedia CDMA systems, object detection quality in sensor networks, and self-tuning fuzzy control for web servers. Further insights are provided on the impacts of individual frame losses on speech quality, advanced QoS protocols for real-time content delivery, and designing predictable internet backbones. The text examines differentiated QoS in MPLS networks, transient loop avoidance, and stochastic service guarantees in communication networks. Short papers delve into QoS authentication, admission control concepts, and improvements for WiFi hotspots. It also addresses privacy and reliability through dispersive routing and distributed algorithms for MPLS-TE. The impact of QoS on industry and academia, the need for QoS in wireless systems, and research issues in personal networks are explored, alongside perspectives on hybrid networks and mission-critical applications over multi-service networks.
The contents cover a range of topics related to self-organizing systems and networks. It includes discussions on making these systems secure, examining the dual nature of self-organizing networks, and presenting full papers on merging similar structured overlays. Key studies explore self-protection in P2P networks, modeling population dynamics in BitTorrent-like systems, and optimizing routing through combined virtual and physical structures. Additional research addresses randomized self-stabilizing algorithms for wireless sensor networks and job scheduling for maximal throughput in autonomic computing systems. The focus also extends to global behavior in computing grids, decentralized clustering for task allocation, and self-tuning mechanisms in swarm intelligence systems. A cross-layer approach is proposed for detecting data packet droppers in mobile ad-hoc networks, alongside on-demand energy-aware routing strategies. Various methodologies for automatic data locality optimization and bio-inspired self-protection in organic middleware are discussed, along with autonomic management of edge servers. Short papers present ubiquitous networking technologies, proposals for self-organizing information distribution in P2P networks, and autonomic security measures for home networks. The collection also features decentralized information systems, defense strategies against intrusions in grids, and advancements in organic robotic c