497 resultados para Holocaust denial
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La natura distribuita del Cloud Computing, che comporta un'elevata condivisione delle risorse e una moltitudine di accessi ai sistemi informatici, permette agli intrusi di sfruttare questa tecnologia a scopi malevoli. Per contrastare le intrusioni e gli attacchi ai dati sensibili degli utenti, vengono implementati sistemi di rilevamento delle intrusioni e metodi di difesa in ambiente virtualizzato, allo scopo di garantire una sicurezza globale fondata sia sul concetto di prevenzione, sia su quello di cura: un efficace sistema di sicurezza deve infatti rilevare eventuali intrusioni e pericoli imminenti, fornendo una prima fase difensiva a priori, e, al contempo, evitare fallimenti totali, pur avendo subito danni, e mantenere alta la qualità del servizio, garantendo una seconda fase difensiva, a posteriori. Questa tesi illustra i molteplici metodi di funzionamento degli attacchi distribuiti e dell'hacking malevolo, con particolare riferimento ai pericoli di ultima generazione, e definisce le principali strategie e tecniche atte a garantire sicurezza, protezione e integrità dei dati all'interno di un sistema Cloud.
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For the 18th and 19th centuries, flirtation was largely understood to be the symptom of a woman’s uncontrollable (and innate) sexual appetite. Any woman who questioned its cultural operations, such as Mary Wollstonecraft, was accused of being simultaneously sexually inappropriate in her interests, as well as prudish in her denial of feminine desire as a legitimate expression of a woman’s character. What this talk will argue, however, is that, for Wollstonecraft, the flirt is a fundamentally masculine figure who engages not in a struggle over desire, but rather in a struggle for power based on monarchical politics of the Ancien Regime.
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Panel 3: Encounters of Perpetrators and Victims of Genocides Lina Nikou, University of Hamburg, Germany: “Coming Back Home? Berlin Presents Itself to Refugees of the Nazi Regime Living Abroad” Download paper (login required) Michelle Bellino, Harvard University: “Whose Past, Whose Present? Historical Memory among the ‘Postwar’ Generation in Guatemala” Download paper (login required) Srdjan Radovic, Belgrade University/Institute of Ethnography SASA, Serbia: “Memory Culture, Politics of Place, and Social Actors in the Remembrance of Belgrade's World War II Camp” Download paper (login required) Chair: Michael Nolte and Michael Geheran, Clark University Comment: Omer Bartov, Brown University
Resumo:
Panel 5: Memories and Fantasies of Genocides Mark Hobbs, University of Winchester, United Kingdom: "Destroying Memory: The Attack on Holocaust Conscience and Memory in Britain 1942-2011" Download paper (login required) Kristen Dyck, Washington State University: "Hate Rock: White-Power Music in International Perspective" Download paper (login required) Audrey Mallet, Concordia University, Canada: “The Old Jewish Strangler and Other Ghost Stories: Poles’ Struggle to Come to Terms with the Holocaust” Download paper (login required) Tea Rozman-Clark, University of Nova Gorica, Slovenia: “Oral History: UN Peacekeepers and Local Population of the UN Safe Area Srebrenica” Download paper (login required) Chair: Kimberly Partee and Kathrin Haurand, Clark UniversityComment: Cecilie Felicia Stokholm Banke, Danish Institute for International Studies, Copenhagen