Resources
- Identity Use Cases & Scenarios.
- FIDIS Deliverables.
- Identity of Identity.
- Interoperability.
- Profiling.
- Forensic Implications.
- HighTechID.
- Privacy and legal-social content.
- D13.1: Identity and impact of privacy enhancing technologie.
- D13.1 Addendum: Identity and impact of privacy enhancing technologies.
- D13.3: Study on ID number policies.
- D13.6 Privacy modelling and identity.
- D13.7: Workshop Privacy.
- D14.1: Workshop on Privacy in Business Processes.
- D14.2: Study on Privacy in Business Processes by Identity Management.
- D14.3: Study on the Suitability of Trusted Computing to support Privacy in Business Processes.
- D14.4: Workshop on “From Data Economy to Secure.
- D16.3: Towards requirements for privacy-friendly identity management in eGovernment.
- Mobility and Identity.
- Other.
- IDIS Journal.
- FIDIS Interactive.
- Press & Events.
- In-House Journal.
- Booklets
- Identity in a Networked World.
- Identity R/Evolution.
GNUnet
One of the technologies we have missed in the original text of the deliverable is GNUnet – it represents a technology for censorship-resistant file sharing. It is not a typical privacy enhancement technology, as the goal is not that much hide content of the data, or “author” of a piece of data, but rather place, where the given piece of data is stored. The attacker we are interested in here is someone trying to delete a file and make it unavailable. GNUnet [4, 3] is a “decentralized, anonymous, and censorship-resistant P2P framework” [2] and it enables users to request contents, for instance files, Web sites, or other data. Consequently, such contents will be delivered, if available within the network.
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