Franco Davoli

2papers

2 Papers

DLJul 26, 2021
PAD: a graphical and numerical enhancement of structural coding to facilitate thematic analysis of a literature corpus

Etienne-Victor Depasquale, Humaira Abdul Salam, Franco Davoli

We suggest an enhancement to structural coding through the use of (a) causally bound codes, (b) basic constructs of graph theory and (c) statistics. As is the norm with structural coding, the codes are collected into categories. The categories are represented by nodes (graph theory). The causality is illustrated through links (graph theory) between the nodes and the entire set of linked nodes is collected into a single directed acyclic graph. The number of occurrences of the nodes and the links provide the input required to analyze relative frequency of occurrence, as well as opening a scope for further statistical analysis. While our raw data was a corpus of literature from a specific discipline, this enhancement is accessible to any qualitative analysis that recognizes causality in its structural codes.

CRNov 13, 2019
Exploiting Satellite Broadcast despite HTTPS

Nikos Fotiou, Vasilios A Siris, George C. Polyzos et al.

HTTPS enhances end-user privacy and is often preferred or enforced by over-the-top content providers, but renders inoperable all intermediate network functions operating above the transport layer, including caching, content/protocol optimization, and security filtering tools. These functions are crucial for the optimization of integrated satellite-terrestrial networks. Additionally, due to the use of end-to-end and per-session encryption keys, the advantages of a satellite's wide-area broadcasting capabilities are limited or even negated completely. This paper investigates two solutions for authorized TLS interception that involve TLS splitting. We present how these solutions can be incorporated into integrated satellite-terrestrial networks and we discuss their trade-offs in terms of deployment, performance, and privacy. Furthermore, we design a solution that leverages satellite broadcast transmission even in the presence of TLS (i.e. with the use of HTTPS) by exploiting application layer encryption in the path between the satellite terminal and the TLS server. Our findings indicate that even if no other operation than TLS splitting is performed, TLS handshake time, which involves roundtrips through possibly a Geosynchronous satellite, can be reduced by up to 94%. Moreover, by combining an application layer encryption solution with TLS splitting, broadcast transmissions can be exploited