SearchSecurity: Network Security Tactics

Sunday, March 17, 2013

Tutorial 4: Information Resources on the Web

Finding Current and Specific Information on the Web
  • Use a search engine that  allows date-range searches
  • Comes news portals are dedicated to "current" news.
  • News aggregation Web sites collect and display content from several other news Web sites.
    • A wire service is an organization that gathers and distributes news to newspapers, magazines, broadcasters, Web sites, and other organizations that pay a fee to the wire service.
 Finding Up-to-date Weather Information

There are local, nationwide, and worldwide weather forecast Web sites. 

Features:
  • Live Radar
  • Graphs
  • 10-day forecasts
  • Trip planners
  • Severe weather reports
  • School Closings
  • Satellite Views
  • Desktop weather apps
  • Video Forecasts      


Find People and Businesses Online

Search by name of person or business, location, phone number, type of business, and more...
 
Yellow Page Directories: Web sites that store information about businesses only, similar to the printed yellow pages phone book.

White Pages: Let you search for individuals’ names, addresses, and telephone numbers


Collect information from published telephone directories and other publicly available information and index it by last name

Some Web sites make unpublished and unlisted telephone numbers available for public use

Response to concerns about privacy violations has led most white pages sites to offer people a way to remove their listing.  If it concerns you, you can request removal from the white pages directory itself

Find Products and Services Online

E-commerce: The process of developing, marketing, selling, delivering, servicing, and paying for products and services online.  
  • Some retailers have both a physical location and a Web site; others are online only without a storefront/brick-and mortar store. 
Examples of "online only" companies: AmazonEbayNew Egg

Copyright and Fair Use

Copyright: Government granted rights to the author or creator of an original work.
Intellectual Property: Creations of the human mind.
Public Domain: Once a copyright has expired, anyone can use the work without requesting permission from the original author.

Fair Use: U.S. copyright law allows  people to use portions of copyrighted works without obtaining permission from the the copyright holder.

Fair Use Determinants
  1. The purpose and character of the new work
  2. The nature of the copyrighted work
  3. The amount and substantiality of the portion used in relation to the copyrighted work as a whole.
  4. The effect of the use on the potential market, or value, of the copyrighted work.    
Plagiarism: Failure to site the source of material the you use
  • Plagiarism is a serious legal violation that can lead to a failing grade, being expelled from school, being fired from a job, or being subjected to a hefty fine or prosecution

  

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