Law
Virtual information system on working area
In order to get strategic positioning for competition in business organization, the information system must be ahead in this information age where the information as one of the weapons to win the competition and in the right hand the information will become a right bullet. The information system with the information technology support isn't enough if just only on internet or implemented with internet technology. The growth of information technology as tools for helping and making people easy to use must be accompanied by wanting to make fun and happy when they make contact with the information technology itself. Basically human like to play, since childhood human have been playing, free and happy and when human grow up they can't play as much as when human was in their childhood. We have to develop the information system which is not perform information system itself but can help human to explore their natural instinct for playing, making fun and happiness when they interact with the information system. Virtual information system is the way to present playing and having fun atmosphere on working area.
A Survey of Paraphrasing and Textual Entailment Methods
Androutsopoulos, Ion, Malakasiotis, Prodromos
Paraphrasing methods recognize, generate, or extract phrases, sentences, or longer natural language expressions that convey almost the same information. Textual entailment methods, on the other hand, recognize, generate, or extract pairs of natural language expressions, such that a human who reads (and trusts) the first element of a pair would most likely infer that the other element is also true. Paraphrasing can be seen as bidirectional textual entailment and methods from the two areas are often similar. Both kinds of methods are useful, at least in principle, in a wide range of natural language processing applications, including question answering, summarization, text generation, and machine translation. We summarize key ideas from the two areas by considering in turn recognition, generation, and extraction methods, also pointing to prominent articles and resources.
A Survey of Paraphrasing and Textual Entailment Methods
Androutsopoulos, I., Malakasiotis, P.
Paraphrasing methods recognize, generate, or extract phrases, sentences, or longer natural language expressions that convey almost the same information. Textual entailment methods, on the other hand, recognize, generate, or extract pairs of natural language expressions, such that a human who reads (and trusts) the first element of a pair would most likely infer that the other element is also true. Paraphrasing can be seen as bidirectional textual entailment and methods from the two areas are often similar. Both kinds of methods are useful, at least in principle, in a wide range of natural language processing applications, including question answering, summarization, text generation, and machine translation. We summarize key ideas from the two areas by considering in turn recognition, generation, and extraction methods, also pointing to prominent articles and resources.
Socio-Legal Analysis of Criminal Sentences: A Preliminary Study
Giura, Giuseppe (University of Catani) | Giuffrida, Giovanni (University of Catani) | Pennisi, Carlo (University of Catani) | Zarba, Calogero (Neodata Intelligence)
This paper discusses a research based on analyzing criminal sentences on criminal trials on organized crime activity in Sicily pronounced from 2000 through 2006. Large criminal sentences related dataset collection activity in Italy is severely constrained for various reasons such as difficulty of data collection at the courthouses, unavailability of data in digital format, and classification criteria used in the public archives. Thus, in general, judicial statistics suffer from lack of reliability and informativeness. The objective of this research is to analyze the text of criminal sentences in a revisable and verifiable way, so that information is extracted on the trial leading to the sentence, the socio-economic environment in which the relevant events occurred, and the differences between the various districts conducting the trials. The purpose is to elaborate a tool of automated analysis of the text of the sentences that is generalizable to other areas of jurisprudence, and, outside of jurisprudence, to other temporal and geographical contexts. The 726 criminal sentences that have been converted into text files have been pronounced at all judicial levels in the four Sicilian districts for mafia-related crimes. This research is relevant because, for the first time in Italy, we aim to empirically describe the juridical response to the phenomenon of organized crime, by using a large and extendable database of criminal sentences that can be analyzed with data mining techniques, rather than deriving general conclusions from a focused small set of sentences.
A Logical Understanding of Legal Interpretation
Boella, Guido (University of Torino) | Governatori, Guido (NICTA) | Rotolo, Antonino (University of Bologna) | Torre, Leendert van der (CWI Amsterdam and TU Delf)
The applicability conditions of legal Norms regulating computer systems can be modelled in different rules very often refer to these institutional concepts, rather ways, see, for example, (Boella, van der Torre, and than to so called brute facts. To simplify the notation we refer Verhagen 2008). If norms are represented by hard constraints, to the former as constitutive rules, and the latter simply then computer systems are designed to avoid violations.
Abstract Dialectical Frameworks
Brewka, Gerhard (Leipzig University) | Woltran, Stefan (Vienna University of Technology)
In this paper we introduce dialectical frameworks, a powerful generalization of Dung-style argumentation frameworks where each node comes with an associated acceptance condition. This allows us to model different types of dependencies, e.g. support and attack, as well as different types of nodes within a single framework. We show that Dung's standard semantics can be generalized to dialectical frameworks, in case of stable and preferred semantics to a slightly restricted class which we call bipolar frameworks. We show how acceptance conditions can be conveniently represented using weights respectively priorities on the links and demonstrate how some of the legal proof standards can be modeled based on this idea.
The Privacy Paradox
Zallone, Raffaele (Studio Legale Zallone)
The present privacy legislation continue to be drafted on the basis of the Strasburg Convention of 1981. The mere fact that present privacy laws are based on principles drafted 29 years ago, when the web did not exist, shows that privacy legislation need to make a quantum leap to be in line with the realities of to-day’s real life operating environment. If the status quo is kept, the law and its application shall face serious (and sometimes insurmountable) obstacles to its implementation, making compliance costly for private business, at the same time jeopardizing effectiveness of privacy protection for individuals. A new set of rules should be drafted and established, addressing the changed environment of information and communication technology, in order to allow free flow of information at the same time assuring due protection of personal data.
Combining Privacy and Security Risk Assessment in Security Quality Requirements Engineering
Abu-Nimeh, Saeed (Websense Security Labs) | Mead, Nancy (Carnegie Mellon University)
Functional or end user requirements are the tasks that the system - Protection and control of consolidated data under development is expected to perform. However, nonfunctional - Data retrieval requirements are the qualities that the system is - Equitable treatment of users to adhere to. Functional requirements are not as difficult - Data retention and disposal to tackle, as it is easier to test their implementation in the - User monitoring and protection against unauthorized system under development. Security and privacy requirements monitoring are considered nonfunctional requirements, although in many instances they do have functionality. To identify Several laws and regulations provide a set of guidelines privacy risks early in the design process, privacy requirements that can be used to assess privacy risks. For example, engineering is used (Chiasera et al. 2008). However, the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act unlike security requirements engineering, little attention is (HIPAA) addresses privacy concerns of health information paid to privacy requirements engineering, thus it is less mature systems by enforcing data exchange standards.
Selective Privacy in a Web-Based World: Challenges of Representing and Inferring Context
Waterman, K. Krasnow (Massachusetts Institute of Technology) | McGuinness, Deborah L (Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute) | Ding, Li (Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute)
There is a growing awareness and interest in the issues of accountability and transparency in the pursuit of digital privacy. In previous work, we asserted that systems needed to be “policy aware” and able to compute the likely compliance of any digital transaction with the associated privacy policies (law, rule, or contract). This paper focuses on one critical step in respecting privacy in a digital environment, that of understanding the context associated with each digital transaction. For any individual transaction, the pivotal fact may be context information about the data, the party seeking to use it, the specific action to be taken, or the associated rules. We believe that the granularity of semantic web representation is well suited to this challenge and we support this position in the paper.
Preprocessing Legal Text: Policy Parsing and Isomorphic Intermediate Representation
Waterman, K. Krasnow (Massachusetts Institute of Technology)
One of the most significant challenges in achieving digital privacy is incorporating privacy policy directly in computer systems. While rule systems have long existed, translating privacy laws, regulations, policies, and contracts into processor amenable forms is slow and difficult because the legal text is scattered, run-on, and unstructured, antithetical to the lean and logical forms of computer science. We are using and developing intermediate isomorphic forms as a Rosetta Stone-like tool to accelerate the translation process and in hopes of providing support to future domain-specific Natural Language Processing technology. This report describes our experience, thoughts about how to improve the form, and discoveries about the form and logic of the legal text that will affect the successful development of a rules tool to implement real-world complex privacy policies.