OPEN Repository

Welcome to OPEN - the Repository of Open Scientific Publications, run by the Interdisciplinary Centre for Mathematical and Computational Modelling, University of Warsaw, previously operating as the CeON Repository. The Repository enables Polish researchers from all fields to openly share their articles, books, conference materials, reports, doctoral theses, and other scientific texts.

Publications in the Repository are indexed by the most important search engines and aggregators and downloaded by users worldwide. We invite you to create an account, deposit your publications, and use the resources of the Repository.

22962 archived items

Recent Submissions

Item
After the Attack: Introduction to the Cybercrime Minitrack
(2024-01-03) Siuda, Piotr; Harviainen, Tuomas J.; Hamari, Juho; Gehl, Robert W.; Kazimierz Wielki University; Tampere University; York University
At the HICSS-56 held in 2023, cybercrime was introduced as a multidisciplinary study area. Following a series of informative presentations, the Cybercrime minitrack returns in 2024 for HICSS-57, featuring a wealth of high-caliber research. In response to the call for papers, nine manuscripts from various disciplines were submitted and subjected to peer and editorial review. Three papers were accepted for presentation and publication. All of these have a strong focus on how to respond optimally when organizations and individuals are successfully cyber-attacked. Hence, despite initial submissions on a range of significant topics, the final shape of this year’s minitrack emphasizes the role of communication in cybercrime research.
Item
Information Protection in Dark Web Drug Markets Research
(HICSS Conference Office Department of IT Management, Shidler College of Business, University of Hawaii at Manoa, Honolulu, 2021-01-04) Harviainen, Tuomas J.; Haasio, Ari; Ruokolainen, Teemu; Hassan, Lobna; Siuda, Piotr; Hamari, Juho; Tampere University; Seinäjoki University of Applied Science; Kazimierz Wielki University in Bydgoszcz
In recent years, there have increasingly been conflicting calls for more government surveillance online and, paradoxically, increased protection of the privacy and anonymity of individuals. Many corporations and groups globally have come under fire for sharing data with law enforcement agencies as well as for refusing to cooperate with said agencies, in order to protect their customers. In this study, we focus on Dark Web drug trading sites as an exemplary case of problematic areas of information protection, and ask what practices should be followed when gathering data from the Dark Web. Using lessons from an ongoing research project, we outline best practices for protecting the safety of the people under study on these sites without compromising the quality of research data gathering.