Vol.8 No.3
September
1, 2009
Research
articles:
A Survey of Cookie
Technology Adoption Amongst Nations
(pp211-244)
Andrew F.
Tappenden and James Miller
This paper presents the results of a novel survey probing the use of
cookies with respect to country of origin and related web technologies.
A number of significant relationships are established between the origin
of the web application and cookie deployment. Cookie usage amongst five
popular dynamic web application frameworks is analyzed providing a
per-country breakdown of platform adoption and the establishment of a
link between dynamic web technologies and first-party and sessional
cookies. The prevalence of vendor-specific third-party technologies
both globally and within specific countries is studied. Although global
leaders emerged, a number of country-specific market leaders were
discovered, suggesting that country-specific niche technologies are
competing with the globally dominant technologies within specific
markets. A large association is identified between third-party
persistent cookie usage and a country’s e-business environment—the
strongest evidence that cookies are an integral part of the global
e-commerce environment.
Ontology-Based Search for eGovernment Services Using Citizen Profile
Information
(pp245-267)
Vassilios
Peristeras, Sotirios K. Goudos, Nikolaos Loutas, and Konstantinos
Tarabanis
This paper
presents our effort to “ontologize” a conceptual public service model in
order to express in a formal way domain specific semantics and create a
reusable service ontology for eGovernment applications. The conceptual
model we have used comes from a broader public administration domain
modeling effort, called Governance Enterprise Architecture (GEA). With
this as a starting point, we document our experience of using the Web
Ontology Language (OWL) for the ontological representation of the model.
Moreover, we present a use case and a platform that is based and uses
this ontology for the discovery of eGovernment services. These services
are discovered by semantically matching citizens’ profiles with formally
described public services. The proposed domain ontology is reusable and
can be exploited by a variety of semantic web applications for
eGovernment whenever a formal and standardized model for public services
is needed.
An Automatic Web News
Article Contents Extraction System Based on RSS Feeds
(pp268-284)
Hao Han,
Tomoya Noro, and Takehiro Tokuda
Nowadays, the Web news article contents extraction is vital to provide
news indexing and searching services. Most of the traditional methods
need to analyze the layout of news pages to generate the wrappers
manually or automatically. It is a costly work and needs much
maintenance during the extraction over a long period of time. In this
paper, we construct an automatic Web news article contents extraction
system based on RSS feeds. We propose an effective and efficient
algorithm to extract the news article contents from the news pages
without the analysis of news sites before extraction. We calculate the
relevance between the news title and each sentence in the news page to
detect the news article contents. Our approach is applicable to the
general types of news RSS feeds and independent of news page layout. Our
experimental results show that our approach can extract the news article
contents automatically, accurately and constantly.
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