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Maintaining computer network security has long been an essential component of computer administration. Network security has become essential to companies’ safety and steady development in real-time implementation for diverse physical domains employing computers. Establishing a specific physical domain has consistently included a priority job of improving the safety of computer systems management. Study results on the practical implementation of machine intelligence in network security maintenance. Specifically, this paper examines and offers security management techniques for computer network data protection to establish an all-encompassing security shield for networked computers, with the ultimate goal of improving the safety and reliability of the net-worked computers used in commercial settings. Furthermore, the comprehensive research analysis determines an architectural model for machine intelligence-based network security maintenance (MI-NSM), implying an intrusion detection scheme with a novel neural network system. Labelling important properties of objects or data points and searching for commonalities allows the auto-mobile’s AI to distinguish between a human, the street, another car, and the sky. The simulation evaluation is performed using the NS2 simulator and observes the security maintenance efficiency over the current security solutions.
Bioterrorism: The inevitable future?
Interview with Donald Henderson.
PPP: The Key to Defence Against Bioterrorsim.
Throughout its long years of civil war, Sri Lanka maintained a healthy rate of GDP growth and increasing levels of military spending. Now that the war has ended, Sri Lanka faces the challenge of rebuilding and switching to a peace-time economy with potentially lower levels of defense spending. We employ a cointegration analysis and an error correction model to examine the relationship between non/military spending in Sri Lanka and identify the possible economic benefits of decreased military spending. We find that GDP growth in Sri Lanka is generally not responsive to military spending, but responds positively to non-military spending. Although non-military spending exerts a positive effect upon economic growth compared to military spending, the outcome is still sub-optimal due to the absence of an income multiplier effect. This prefaces potentially good economic news for Sri Lanka in the coming years assuming that hostilities do not resume, that the government can successfully divert resources from the military to the non-military sector and that private sector investment can be effectively encouraged to exert a crowding in effect.