Related papers: Internet Protocol Black Holes: A E-Security Threat
This paper has been withdrawn
The paper has been withdrawn.
This paper has been withdrawn
This paper has been withdrawn.
The Internet of Things' potential for major privacy invasion is a concern. This paper reports on a systematic literature review of privacy-preserving solutions appearing in the research literature and in the media. We analysed proposed…
Internet Protocol (IP) is the narrow waist of multilayered Internet protocol stack which defines the rules for data sent across networks. IPv4 is the fourth version of IP and first commercially available for deployment set by ARPANET in…
This paper investigates a problem about freedom of information. Although freedom of information is generally considered desirable, there are a number of areas where there is substantial agreement that freedom of information should be…
This paper has been withdrawn by the author, due a crucial error in the main idea.
This paper has been removed by arXiv administrators because it plagiarizes gr-qc/0212018, gr-qc/0501002, and gr-qc/9601044. This paper has excessive overlap with the following papers also written by the authors or their collaborators:…
This paper is withdrawn. See quant-ph/9806031 for a discussion.
Wireless sensor networks are vulnerable to several attacks, one of them being the black hole attack. A black hole is a malicious node that attracts all the traffic in the network by advertising that it has the shortest path in the network.…
The purpose of the study is to supplement and update the list of threats to the confidentiality and integrity of the system. The article focuses on the already compiled list of threats and a model of system, but also considers new threats…
This paper has been withdrawn.
Basic properties of black holes are explained in terms of trapping horizons. It is shown that matter and information will escape from an evaporating black hole. A general scenario is outlined whereby a black hole evaporates completely…
The paper is taken out with immediate effect.
We provide some thoughts on the black hole information loss paradox, highlighting some important aspects of the problem that need to be addressed in order to resolve the paradox.
This paper has been withdrawn by the authors because the Hawking radiation outside the core was just obtained for a specific (and somewhat unphysical) model of the tail. Interested readers should instead look at the more recent…
This paper has been withdrawn: it does not evade the no-go results of Mayers, Lo and Chau, to whom I am most grateful for helpful correspondences.
This paper has been withdrawn by the author due to the incorrect argument for the security.
This paper has been withdrawn by the authors due to an error.