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The Lounge What is on Your Mind? (Preprint) Human Cyber Consciousness - The Next Frontier Post 303012452 by Neo on Monday 5th of February 2018 12:51:43 AM
Old 02-05-2018
(Preprint) Human Cyber Consciousness - The Next Frontier

Preprint available at Amazon (Publication date: May 31, 2018):

Preprint Cancelled. See this update.

Quote:
Abstract:

This short introduction to human cyber consciousness is the first book in a new series on cybersecurity that will present a uniquely modern approach to cyberspace situational awareness and human cyber consciousness. This approach can be applied to many cyber domains including cyber security, cyber warfare, information security and cyber operations in general. At a high level this introduction will help the reader understand that cyberspace can be modeled, virtualized and simulated in a way that permits us to view near real-time cyberspace activity with the naked eye. When we virtualize cyberspace in 3D we can observe, orient, travel, research, and work in a virtual world which represents real cyber objects and their relationship to other objects. For purposes of virtualization in this brief introduction, cyberspace consists of objects, generally represented as cyber objects (vertices) and relationships (edges) between cyber objects in graphs. These objects may be enriched by the fusion or addition of data and information to provide a virtual representation for sectors of cyberspace which can be traversed in both space and time. Prototyping this approach with actual commercial web server session activity information has shown that higher degrees of cyber situational awareness can be achieved as objects are increasingly enriched by the fusion of data and information from multiple sensors and sources, objectified and rendered into a 3D visualization. Hence, in this approach to cybersecurity cyberspace can be virtualized and simulated; and this virtualization can be visualized with the naked eye, so cyberspace can be traveled, explored, and operationalized by humans. This is simply a short introduction. Additional details will follow in this mini-series.
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Apache::XMLRPC(3pm)					User Contributed Perl Documentation				       Apache::XMLRPC(3pm)

NAME
Apache::XMLRPC - serve XML-RPC requests from Apache SYNOPSIS
## ## Directives for your Apache config file. ## <Location /RPC2> SetHandler perl-script PerlHandler Apache::XMLRPC PerlSetVar XMLRPC_Config /usr/local/apache/xml-rpc/services </Location> ## ## In the 'services' file referenced above by 'XMLRPC_Config' ## sub foo { ... } sub bar { ... } $map = { foo => &foo, bar => &bar, }; 1; DESCRIPTION
Apache::XMLRPC serves Userland XML-RPC requests from Apache/mod_perl using the Frontier::RPC2 module. Configuring Apache::XMLRPC to work under mod_perl is a two step process. First, you must declare a "<Location>" directive in your Apache configuration file which tells Apache to use the content handler found in the Apache::XMLRPC module and defines a variable which tells the module where to find your services. Then, you must define the services. Apache Configuration Apache configuration is as simple as the "<Location>" directive shown in the synopsis above. Any directive allowed by Apache inside a "<Location>" block is allowed here, but the three lines shown above are required. Pay close attention to the 'PerlSetVar XMLRPC_Config ...' line as this is where you tell Apache where to find your services. This file may reside anywhere accessible by Apache. Defining Services To actually define the XML-RPC routines that will be served, they must reside in the file referenced by the 'PerlSetVar XMLRPC_Config ...' directive in the Apache configuration file. In this file you may place as many Perl subroutines as you like, but only those which are explicitly published will be available to your XML-RPC clients. To publish a subroutine, it must be included in the hash reference named $map (the hash reference must have this name as this is the variable that the Apache::XMLRPC passes to Frontier::RPC2::serve to actually service each request) The hash reference must be defined in this "services" file. The keys of the hash are the service names visible to the XML-RPC clients while the hash values are references to the subroutines you wish to make public. There is no requirement that the published service names match those of their associated subroutines, but it does make administration a little easier. SEE ALSO
perl(1), Frontier::RPC2(3) <http://www.scripting.com/frontier5/xml/code/rpc.html> AUTHOR
Ed Hill <ed-hill@uiowa.edu> is the original author. Tim Peoples <tep@colltech.com> added a few tweaks and all the documenation. perl v5.10.1 2011-04-05 Apache::XMLRPC(3pm)
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