...Interested in learning more about security? SANS Institute InfoSec Reading Room This paper is from the SANS Institute Reading Room site. Reposting is not permitted without express written permission. Data Loss Prevention AD Copyright SANS Institute Author Retains Full Rights . 08 , Au tho rr eta ins ful l rig hts Data Loss Prevention 20 Key fingerprint = AF19 FA27 2F94 998D FDB5 DE3D F8B5 Prevention Data Loss 06E4 A169 4E46 te GIAC Gold Certification Ins titu Author: Prathaben Kanagasingham Advisor: John C.A Bambenek © SA NS Accepted: August 15th 2008 Prathaben Kanagasingham © SANS Institute 2008, 1 As part of the Information Security Reading Room Author retains full rights. . ins Table of Contents ful l rig hts Data Loss Prevention Introduction....................................................................................3 2. Deeper Look at DLP Solution........................................................4 3. Identification of Sensitive Data......................................................6 tho rr eta 1. Data in Motion.....................................................................8 3.2 Data at Rest.....................................................................…9 3.3 Data at End Points.............................................................10 08 , Au 3.1 Choosing a Vendor...
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...Fanny Brawne, Feminism and Bright Star. 1. Background: Historical view of Fanny Brawne 1. "A heartless flirt unworthy of a great poet": Fanny was historically painted as an insufferable flirt who cared nothing for Keats, using him for her own amusement while also "ruining" him. A. "an art-ful bad hearted Girl." (George Keats), "A cold and conventional mistress" (Joseph Severn), a "poor idle Thing of woman-kind" (John Hamilton Reynolds), "[she] was vain and shallow, she was almost a child; the gods denied her the ‘seeing eye,’ and made her unaware.” (Louise Imogen Guiney). Letters of a Critic and the publication of Keat's love letters. B. "To Fanny" used as argument for her "ruin" of the poet: Physician Nature! let my spirit blood! O ease my heart of verse and let me rest; [...] Who now, with greedy looks, eats up my feast? What stare outfaces now my silver moon! Ah! keep that hand unravished at the least; Let, let the amorous burn— But, prithee, do not turn The current of your heart from me so soon C. Vitriol levelled at Fanny similar to that seen towards the partner's of celebrities in modern days; compare to Dylan O'Brien and Britt Robertson. 2. "The unwed widow": The release of Fanny Brawne's letters to Fanny Keats from a private collection in 1939 led to a more sympathetic view of Fanny and her relationship with Keats. A. Sudden 180 led to very (overly)...
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...The poem begins as the speaker “wander[s] through each chartered street” (1) and past the “charted Thames”(2). The word “chartered” has been used to characterize the streets and the river, which indicates that the city and nature are mapped out and controlled by commercial interests (2). Even the river Thames is “chartered” showing that nature is also being exploited (2). He “marks” (4) signs of “weakness [and] woe”(4) “in every face [he] meet[s]”(3). As he passes along the way he notices the distress in the faces if the people, due to restraints that have been imposed upon them by the powers of London causing them to feel “weak” which in turn makes them feel “woe[ful]”, emphasizing the widespread effect that repression has on these people (4). Both nature and those who are taken advantage are “mark[ed]” or owned by authoritative institutions as their only purpose is to serve them. Instead of being treated with respect, they are exploited for the personal gain of...
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...THE SIX SIGMA WAY This page intentionally left blank. THE SIX SIGMA WAY How GE, Motorola, and Other Top Companies Are Honing Their Performance PETER S. PANDE ROBERT P. NEUMAN ROLAND R. CAVANAGH McGraw-Hill New York San Francisco Washington, D.C. Auckland Bogotá Caracas Lisbon London Madrid Mexico City Milan Montreal New Delhi San Juan Singapore Sydney Tokyo Toronto Copyright © 2000 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Manufactured in the United States of America. Except as permitted under the United States Copyright Act of 1976, no part of this publication may be reproduced or distributed in any form or by any means, or stored in a database or retrieval system, without the prior written permission of the publisher. 0-07-137667-4 The material in this eBook also appears in the print version of this title: 0-07-135806-4. All trademarks are trademarks of their respective owners. Rather than put a trademark symbol after every occurrence of a trademarked name, we use names in an editorial fashion only, and to the benefit of the trademark owner, with no intention of infringement of the trademark. Where such designations appear in this book, they have been printed with initial caps. McGraw-Hill eBooks are available at special quantity discounts to use as premiums and sales promotions, or for use in corporate training programs. For more information, please contact George Hoare, Special Sales, at george_hoare@mcgraw-hill.com or (212) 904-4069. ...
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...CAMERA BLOCKING FOR EMOTIONAL BY: TO N I W E I S S Director, Screenwriter, Storyboard Artist I M PAC T O U R TO P I C TO D AY : H O W TO T E L L S TO R I E S W I T H A C A M E R A H O W TO T E L L S TO R I E S W I T H A C A M E R A WO R K S H O P OV E R V I E W PA RT 1 • STORY FLOW & LOGIC: what are shots for ? • SHOT FLOW & RYTHM: how are shots put in sequence ? H O W TO T E L L S TO R I E S W I T H A C A M E R A WO R K S H O P OV E R V I E W PA RT 2 • CAMERA MOVEMENT & EMOTION: moves are feelings • BLOCKING, ANGLES & FRAMING: aesthetics tell stories H O W TO T E L L S TO R I E S W I T H A C A M E R A PA RT 1 WO R K S H O P OV E R V I E W H O W TO T E L L S TO R I E S W I T H A C A M E R A S TO RY F L OW S TO RY F LOW & LOG IC: wha t a re shots for ? Eac h n ew sh o t i n a s e quence creates either : (1 ) in for mati on (2) emoti on To de ci de whi c h i nfo r mation or emoti on i s impor tant to your stor y, a sk th e 2 quest ions every director asks : (1) wh o d o es th e s to r y / scen e b elong to ? (2 ) w ha t do I wan t t o tel l t he a udi en ce ? H O W TO T E L L S TO R I E S W I T H A C A M E R A S H OT F L OW SH OT F LOW & RYTHM : how a re shots put in sequence ? Th e bas ic pa tte r n of a sh ot fl ow i s „Q & A “: o ne s ho t po s es a QU ESTI O N... t he ne x t sh o t ANSWER S it.... a nd e n ds wit h a nother QU EST I ON.... H O W TO T E L L S TO R I E S W I T H A C A M E R A S H OT F L OW S H OT F LOW & RYTHM: editing...
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...‘What is the importance of this section in the whole of The Miller’s prologue and tale?’ This section of the story is crucial for later development of the story and how it concludes. Chaucer, through the narrator of the Miller, describes the character of Absolon proleptically (achieved through language and imagery) and these certain - rather outlandish - qualities also have a part to play later making the tale humorous. However, the description of the character is not significant in the prologue since Absolon is not mentioned explicitly; and reduces the overall importance of Absolon in ‘The Miller’s Tale.’ There are two possible reasons why Absolon was not mentioned in the prologue but both intentional by Chaucer. The Miller does not include Absolon before he telling his story in the prologue. This can be explained in two ways; both very important (especially the first) because it reveals not only the character of the Miller (who is used as a mouthpiece) but of Chaucer’s devices for making this play more realistic. One reason why the Miller omits mention of this character is Chaucer’s use to increase the realism of the tale. The Miller is known to be a man who ‘was of brawn’ and had ‘a werte’ which sprouted ‘a toft of heris’; he later describes Absolon who was ‘smal’ and ‘clippe and shave’. Chaucer makes this a strong contrast. Perhaps it is natural for the Miller not to talk about Absolon: he is not worth mentioning since he is not manly enough. The other reason, this one...
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...1 . INTRODUCTION Internet banking is a product of e-commerce in the field of banking and financial services. In what can be described as business to customer domain for banking industry, Internet banking offers different online services like balance enquiry, balance transfer, opening account,calculate EMI etc. Mostly, these are traditional services offered through internet as a new delivery channel.Banks are also offering payment services on the behalf of their customers who shop in different e-shops, e-malls etc. Further, different banks have different levels of such services offered, starting from level-1 where only information is disseminated through internet to level-3 where online transactions are put through PURPOSE OF THE SYSTEM 1.SECURITY: There is a lot of security of data on this content management system. One cannot open our system without knowing the password. Immediately after opening login screen will appear on screen. Only after entering the correct username and password user can operate our system. 2.REFERENTIAL INTEGRITY: User cannot change the date in the transaction files.Addition of data can be done only on the master files date in transaction files cannot be entered until addition is done on the master files. 3.EASY RETRIEVAL OF DATA:Data is retrieved easily and quick using sql commands. Online commands are used to retrieve huge amount of data. 4.GENERATION OF AUTOMATIC VALUES:In project in some screen some fieldsgenerated automatically like Profile...
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...Journal of Vacation Marketing http://jvm.sagepub.com Strategic theming in theme park marketing Kevin K. F. Wong and Phoebe W. Y. Cheung Journal of Vacation Marketing 1999; 5; 319 DOI: 10.1177/135676679900500402 The online version of this article can be found at: http://jvm.sagepub.com/cgi/content/abstract/5/4/319 Published by: http://www.sagepublications.com Additional services and information for Journal of Vacation Marketing can be found at: Email Alerts: http://jvm.sagepub.com/cgi/alerts Subscriptions: http://jvm.sagepub.com/subscriptions Reprints: http://www.sagepub.com/journalsReprints.nav Permissions: http://www.sagepub.co.uk/journalsPermissions.nav Downloaded from http://jvm.sagepub.com at SAGE Publications on December 2, 2009 Journal of Vacation Marketing Volume 5 Number 4 Academic Papers Strategic theming in theme park marketing Kevin K. F. Wong and Phoebe W. Y. Cheung Received (in revised form): 20th May, 1999 Department of Hotel and Tourism Management, The Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Hung Hom, Kowloon, Hong Kong Tel: (00 852) 2766 6341; Fax: (00 852) 2362 9362; E-mail: hmkevinw@polyu.edu.hk Kevin K. F. Wong, PhD is a Senior Lecturer in Tourism and Manager of the HTM Resource Centre in the Department of Hotel and Tourism Management at the Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Hong Kong. His major research interests focus on tourism management, tourist behaviour, tourism forecasting models and impact studies. Phoebe W. Y. Cheung is a research...
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...Divergences in the semantic structure of words: Different Valency Content Introduction……………………………………………………………………………………… Chapter 1. The Problem of Polysemantic Words 1. Semantic Structure of Words……………………………………………………………… 2. Ways of analyzing Polysemy……………………………………………………………… Chapter 2. Polysemantic Words 1. Polysemantic and Monosemantic Words…………………………………………………….. 2. Semantic Structure of Polysemantic Words………………………………………………….. 3. Examples of Polysemantic Words……………………………………………………………. Conclusion…………………………………………………………………………………………. References………………………………………………………………………………………….. Introduction The following paper is devoted to the theme “Divergences in the semantic structure of words”. The semantic structure of words presents a complicated problem .The only exceptions are some groups of monosemantic words. Divergences in the semantic structure of words of the Sourse and Target languages are one of the primary cases of lexical transformations. These divergences are connected with certain peculiar features of a word or a group of words. Even words which seem to have the same meaning in the two languages are not semantically identical. The primary meanings of correlated words often coincide while their derivative meanings do not. Thus there is only partial correspondence in the structures of polysemantic words as their lexical semantic variants do not cover one another. Semantic correlation is not to be interpreted as semantic...
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...PROJECT: AMERICAN APPAREL Marketing Strategy AMERICAN APPAREL Abstract American Apparel has been experiencing a declining trend since 2008. My aim is to identify the reasons why this has been, and continue, to happen. Even if the world financial crisis had an important role at the end of the day, there surely are other actual and potential threats the company has overlooked: for example, right 2 days before the beginning of the decline the CFO resigned; they didn't properly manage internal control especially regarding the financial closing; they cut the advertising budget during 2009; they have been opening stores without considering cannibalization. While trying to describe the mistakes American Apparel did during the last 6 years, an evaluation of its recovery marketing plan to put the company back on the right track will be made. Company's Strategy American Apparel (from now on APP) is a clothing manufacturing, wholesaling and retailing company headquartered in Los Angeles, founded in 1988 by Dov Charney, who is still its CEO and Chairman of the Board of Directors. During the late 80's and the 90's, when the identity of APP was being modeled, Charney was living his life between Canada, South Carolina and California and that deeply influenced the company: while driven by the initial intention to bring affordable American t-shirt to Montreal people, APP slowly developed interests in fashion to please the young in Los Angeles, yet maintaining...
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...Abstract Managers always strive to recruit and retain quality employees and reduce turnover rates in their organizations. The study proposes that employee retention rates at Applied Research Associates (ARA) are driven by employee satisfaction. Applied Research Associates employs just over 1,200 employees and the study will use a written, paper survey to collect information from 200 randomly selected employees. Some of the information collected will be used to classify the study participants. The remaining information regarding employee views on benefits and career advancement opportunities within the company will be used to measure the level of employee satisfaction and will be analyzed for potential areas to improve retention of quality employees at ARA. Make sure word count is at 150 or less. Good summary Employee Retention at Applied Research Associates From an organizational perspective, the recruitment and retention of top-notch employees is even more important today than ever before (Holtom, Mitchell, Lee, & Eberly, 2008). Successful organizations have become increasingly dependent on their quality this maybe bias calling them quality employees employees’ ability to adapt to market changes; the same market changes that may cause job dissatisfaction among employees and increase voluntary turnover rates of key employees (Chen, Ployhart, Thomas, Anderson, & Bliese, 2011). Applied Research Associates has an excellent record in recruiting high quality employees...
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...Treiman, R., Clifton, C., Jr, Meyer, A. S., & Wurm, L. H. (2003). Language comprehension and production. Comprehensive Handbook of Psychology, Volume 4: Experimental Psychology. New York: John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Pages 527-548. Copyright John Wiley & Sons. Psycholinguistics: Language comprehension and production Rebecca Treiman Wayne State University Charles Clifton, Jr. University of Massachusetts Antje S. Meyer University of Birmingham Lee H. Wurm Wayne State University Acknowledgments: Preparation of this chapter was supported by NSF Grant SBR-9807736 to R.T. and NIH Grant HD18708 to the University of Massachusetts. To appear in A.F. Healy & R.W. Proctor (Eds.), Comprehensive handbook of psychology, Vol. 4: Experimental Psychology. New York: Wiley. Treiman et al., Psycholinguistics, 2 Introduction Language comprehension Spoken word recognition Printed word recognition The mental lexicon Comprehension of sentences and discourse Phenomena common to reading and listening comprehension Phenomena specific to the comprehension of spoken language Phenomena specific to the comprehension of written language Language production Access to single words in spoken language production Generation of sentences in spoken language production Written language production Conclusions INTRODUCTION Psychologists have long been interested in language, but psycholinguistics...
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...Projective processes: gangs, bullying, and racism Groups and gangs When does a group become a gang? Hamish Canham (2002) defines a gang mentality as one in which de- structive forces have taken over. It is paranoid-schizoid functioning where there is no thinking, only a need to rid oneself of parts of the personality that might expose the individual (or group) to feelings of neediness, ignorance, or weakness. Within the personality, this is achieved by imposing a reign of terror on the vulnerable parts. In gang behaviour, the reign of terror is directed towards other groups. A gang is anti-thought, anti-parents, and anti-life. Hamish offers a commentary on William Golding’s The Lord of the Flies and tracks the way in which the boys lose touch with an idea of parental function and give way to the lure of the gang. He draws attention to the way in which Ralph and Piggy manage to impose some structure by making the rule about the conch: in community meetings, boys cannot speak unless they are holding the conch. At the beginning of their time on the island, the older boys are in touch with the idea of rules (which Hamish suggests are a representation of parental function), and they agree to this arrangement. Later, the rule is cast aside, the conch smashed, and order is overthrown in an outpouring of paranoid-schizoid behaviour. Jack, the leader of the choir, represents the pull in the group away from feeling lonely, afraid and dependent on each other ...
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...The Canterbury Tales Geoffrey Chaucer Key Facts full title · The Canterbury Tales author · Geoffrey Chaucer type of work · Poetry (two tales are in prose: the Tale of Melibee and the Parson’s Tale) genres · Narrative collection of poems; character portraits; parody; estates satire; romance; fabliau language · Middle English time and place written · Around 1386–1395, England date of first publication · Sometime in the early fifteenth century publisher · Originally circulated in hand-copied manuscripts narrator · The primary narrator is an anonymous, naïve member of the pilgrimage, who is not described. The other pilgrims narrate most of the tales. point of view · In the General Prologue, the narrator speaks in the first person, describing each of the pilgrims as they appeared to him. Though narrated by different pilgrims, each of the tales is told from an omniscient third-person point of view, providing the reader with the thoughts as well as actions of the characters. tone · The Canterbury Tales incorporates an impressive range of attitudes toward life and literature. The tales are by turns satirical, elevated, pious, earthy, bawdy, and comical. The reader should not accept the naïve narrator’s point of view as Chaucer’s. tense · Past setting (time) · The late fourteenth century, after 1381 setting (place) · The Tabard Inn; the road to Canterbury protagonists · Each individual tale has protagonists, but Chaucer’s plan is to make none of his storytellers...
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...Lexical borrowing = slovní výpůjčky - adoption from another lg with the same meaning English is tolerant to other lgs, nenasytný vypůjčovatel (70% non-anglosaxon origin), welcomes foreign words, not homogenous lg like French (majority of expressions was taken from F.) reasons: lg feels a need for a new word; to pre-denote a special concept (Sputnik, gradually disappeared from lg; certain lg has a kind of prestigious position (matter of fashion, but overuse of English words; matter of political force); distinction of functional style (matter of development) – three synonymical expressions of diff. origin (anglo-saxon origin: home, French words (additional meanings): resindence, Latin words: domicile, Greek origin, etc.) layers of three origins : hunt/chase/pursue rise/mount/ascend ask/question (certain amount of intensity)/interrogate high tolerance in English; in French and in German – used to avoid it; in Czech – had to defend its position to German, Linguists tried to set certain rules for using words=re-establishion of Czech lg English changes pronunciation of borrowed words (E. is simply a germanic lg, but more Romans lg in vocabulary) the basic vocabulary=core vocabulary (be, have, do) is Anglo-Saxon, surrounding periphery of v. maybe borrowed (count a word each time that occurs) wave of new adoptions: swift adotion - in some periods in lg more words than usual are adopted, in the 13. century after the Norman conquest, natural mechanism!! self-regulated – if there...
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