José Luis Salazar
University of Zaragoza
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Publication
Featured researches published by José Luis Salazar.
Industrial Management and Data Systems | 2012
Guillermo Azuara; José Luis Tornos; José Luis Salazar
Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to develop an efficient tool to ensure traceability data entry based on RFID and improve the detection of fakes inside the supply chain.Design/methodology/approach – First, the authors put forward a secure traceability system with a cryptographic operator that improves efficiency, saves costs and is adaptable to all types of supply chains. Second, the authors implement the system in a food manufacturing company, show the compatibility of the system with the initial production chain and demonstrate its improvement.Findings – The authors have economically and technologically improved the detection of faked goods in the supply chain by means of a cheap and scalable system based on RFID.Research limitations/implications – The system has been tested in a manufacturing point of the supply chain, not in the supply chain as a whole. As traceability is additive in character, the results can be generalized and applied to each part of the supply chain.Practical implications – A...
Computer Standards & Interfaces | 2008
José Luis Salazar; Joan Josep Piles; José María García Ruiz; José María Moreno-Jiménez
e-Cognocracy [J.M. Moreno-Jimenez, J.M. Polasek, e-Democracy and knowledge: a multicriteria framework for the new democratic era, Journal of Multicriteria Decision Analysis 12 (2003) 163-176 [15]; J.M. Moreno-Jimenez, J.M. Polasek, e-Cognocracy and the participation of immigrants in e-governance, TED Conference on e-government 2005. Electronic democracy: The challenge ahead, Schriftenreihe Informatik, vol. 13, University Rudolf Trauner-Verlag, 2005, pp 18-26 [16]; G.E. Kersten, e-Democracy and participatory decision processes: lessons from e-negotiation experiments, Journal Multi-criteria Decision Analysis 12 (2003) 127-143 [13]] is a new democratic system that focuses on the creation and social diffusion of the knowledge gained from the scientific resolution of highly complex problems associated with public decision making. In this scenario, e-voting is not limited to the choice of a given political party, but to the extraction of the relevant knowledge. Even though e-voting systems have been widely studied, some situations are still not covered by the conventional literature, and this makes it necessary to consider certain variations to the main schema. In this paper, we will present one such lacuna (associated with e-cognocracy), and will examine the changes required in conventional e-voting processes and their implications.
Computer Standards & Interfaces | 2010
José Luis Salazar; Joan Josep Piles; José Ruiz-Mas; José María Moreno-Jiménez
E-cognocracy is a democratic model focussed on the joint creation of Social Wisdom through the Internet by means of the extraction and diffusion of knowledge related with the scientific resolution of highly complex problems associated with public decision making. To this end, e-cognocracy allows for the consideration of several rounds during the resolution process. The linkability of votes, the intensity of preferences and the identification of the arguments that support choices, among other matters, require the design of a specific e-voting process the e-cognocracy, e-cognising. This paper presents various implementations of the technology, commencing with an initial proof of concept and going on to the use of smart cards to permit remote use of the system and influence the level of perceived confidence among users, eliminating the role of one of the confidence authorities formerly required to ensure appropriate system security.
Network Protocols and Algorithms | 2015
José Luis Tornos; José Luis Salazar; Joan Josep Piles
A MANET, in order to work properly, needs its nodes to work collaboratively. This is not always the case, and thus tools are developed to detect and identify uncooperative nodes. In this paper we present TADSR, a protocol based on an already existing secure routing protocol on top of which it adds trust management features. Our aim is to detect rogue nodes, and also to improve the overall performance of the original protocol. The information gathering process will encompass both direct means and an indirect process through which other nodes will provide their own assessments. Then, a punishments and prizes system will try to get involved as many nodes as possible to improve the network performance.
Computers in Human Behavior | 2012
José María Moreno-Jiménez; Juan Aguarón; Jesús Cardeñosa; María Teresa Escobar; José Luis Salazar; Adrián Toncovich; Alberto Turón
Two key aspects of the Knowledge Society are the interconnection between the actors involved in the decision making processes and the importance of the human factor, particularly the citizens continuous learning and education. This paper presents a new module devoted to knowledge extraction and diffusion that has been incorporated into a previously developed decision making tool concerning the Internet and related with the multicriteria selection of a discrete number of alternatives (PRIOR-Web). Quantitative and qualitative procedures using data and text mining methods have been employed in the extraction of knowledge. Graphical visualisation tools have been incorporated in the diffusion stage of the methodological approach suggested when dealing with decision making in the Knowledge Society. The resulting collaborative platform is being used as the methodological support for the cognitive democracy known as e-cognocracy.
Computers in Human Behavior | 2011
José María Moreno-Jiménez; Joan Josep Piles; José María García Ruiz; José Luis Salazar; Alberto Turón
Policy making social computing conform a set of social software tools that deal with the e-participation of citizens in policy making, that is to say, with the conjoint (representatives and citizens) design and selection through the internet of public policies. E-cognocracy is a cognitive democracy oriented to the extraction and sharing of knowledge associated with the scientific resolution of public decision making problems related with the governance of society. This model of democracy takes advantage of the potential of the Knowledge Society with the incorporation of the knowledge and the preferences of the actors involved in the decision making process. This uses different rounds in order to incorporate the preferences through an e-voting module and the arguments that support the individual positions through e-discussion. Considering e-cognocracy as the democracy model that supports interaction between citizens and their representatives in the construction of a better world, this paper presents a new proposal for the technological securization of the e-voting (prioritization) and e-discussion stages of e-cognocracy. This new suggestion, in which the electoral authority has been eliminated through the use of short linkable ring signatures, is a more simple and efficient system than our previous proposals.
International Journal of Social and Humanistic Computing | 2010
Alberto Turón; José María Moreno-Jiménez; Joan Josep Piles; José María García Ruiz; José Luis Salazar
E-cognocracy (Moreno-Jimenez, 2003, 2004, 2006) is a cognitive democracy oriented to the extraction and sharing of knowledge associated with the scientific resolution of public decision making problems related with the governance of society. This model of democracy takes advantage of the potential of the knowledge society by means of the incorporation of the knowledge and the preferences of the actors involved in the decision making process. This is carried out by using different rounds to incorporate the preferences and a collaborative tool for the discussion stage. The technological security of the voting process has been studied in previous papers of our research group (Piles et al., 2006, 2007; Moreno-Jimenez et al., 2008; Salazar et al., 2008). Now we cope with the security of the discussion stage, taking into account either registered and non-registered individuals.
VOTE-ID'07 Proceedings of the 1st international conference on E-voting and identity | 2007
Joan Josep Piles; José Luis Salazar; José María García Ruiz; José María Moreno-Jiménez
e-Cognocracy is a new, creative, innovative and cognitive democratic system based on the evolution of living systems which focuses on the extraction and social diffusion of the knowledge derived from the scientific resolution of highly complex problems associated with public decision making related to the governance of society. Among the many tools needed to fully develop e-cognocracy, we will focus in e-voting, as it is the first needed to gather the information supplied by the citizens. One of the things that may drive people away from this kind of systems is their complexity. In this paper we present an e-voting protocol designed to work with e-cognocracy, much simpler than the previously existing one [1], through the use of short linkable ring signatures. Short linkable ring signatures are a cryptographic primitive that allows one person to sign as a member of a group, but without giving any information about the identity of the signer and with no previous set up and, furthermore, all the signatures from the same signer can be linked together but keeping the anonymity. The key element they present is that, unlike other schemas, they have a constant size (making them independent of the number of people in the group).
conference on risks and security of internet and systems | 2011
José Luis Tornos; Joan Josep Piles; José Luis Salazar
MANETs have two characteristics that make traditional routing protocols cannot be applied in a straightforward manner to achieve their objectives: firstly, the lack of a default infrastructure; secondly, the variability of this infrastructure once the nodes forming the network move themselves and vary their relative position to the other nodes. Owing to this, specific routing protocols are developed for MANETs. Bearing in mind that the characteristics of these networks limit the available resources (power consumption, bandwidth), incorporating security to routing protocols in an optimal way is not easy. In this paper we present a secure routing protocol based on DSR that employs elliptic curve cryptography to sign the route discovery packets. It also uses the aggregate signature scheme which allows us to compact M signatures of M different messages, even if the signatures are from M different signers, in one single signature.
world summit on the knowledge society | 2010
Alberto Turón; Juan Aguarón; María Teresa Escobar; Carolina Gallardo; José María Moreno-Jiménez; José Luis Salazar
This paper presents a social software application denominated as PRIOR-WK&E. It has been developed by the Zaragoza Multicriteria Decision Making Group (GDMZ) with the aim of responding to the challenges of policy making in the Knowledge Society. Three specific modules have been added to PRIOR, the collaborative tool used by the research group (GDMZ) for considering the multicriteria selection of a discrete set of alternatives. The first module (W), that deals with multiactor decision making through the Web, and the second (K), that concerns the extraction and diffusion of knowledge related to the scientific resolution of the problem, were explained in [1]. The new application strengthens securitization and includes a third module (E) that evaluates the effectiveness of public administrations policy making.