shared objects
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2021 ◽  
Vol 66 (2 supplement) ◽  
pp. 25-31
Author(s):  
Alexandru Cosmescu

"Based on the transcript of a fragment from a philosophical practice session carried by Oscar Brenifier, I flesh out several aspects of this dialogical form of philosophical practice. First, it is a form of interaction grounded in the interlocutors’ interaffection. Second, the main mechanism of carrying through the dialogic interaction is the practitioner’s repeating the other’s words, writing them down, and then questioning them, thus extracting them from the other’s discursive flow and making them shared objects for an intersubjective gaze. Third, this form of dialogue is asymmetrical: while the other is providing the “content”, the practitioner is responsible for explicating it. Keywords: Socratic Dialogue; Philosophical Practice; Dis-cursive Flow; Discourse Analysis; Intersubjectiv-ity "


2021 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Adi Jatmika

Class III state houses are in the form of flats including those whose rights can be transferred either independently and / or in the form of Apartment Units with or without their land by means of leasing, there are sectoral regulations that regulate these matters such as rules regarding state houses, flats, state property, and land registration have the impact of disharmony and legal vacancies. The research method used is the juridical-normative research method. The final part of this research concludes that the validity of Class III State Houses in the Form of Flats must meet the requirements stipulated in statutory regulations, including the status of land rights, the distribution of apartment elements such as shared land, shared objects, and parts together as regulated in the Law on Flats, the existence of the Association of Owners and Occupants of Apartment Units (<em>PPPSRS</em>) which is formed by the agency concerned, as well as the issuance of the Occupancy Permit of Class III State Houses in the Form of Flats. Holders of occupancy permits have rights, namely SIP Holders of State Houses of Category III can apply for transfer of Class III State Houses to the relevant Minister, protection of efforts to apply for transfer of these rights is preventive based on positive law in Indonesia which regulates the transfer can be carried out. There was a vacuum and disharmony in the Legislation regarding the Transfer of Rights to Group III State Houses in the Form of Flats, seen from the existence of Regulations that govern the transfer as in Presidential Regulation Number 11 of 2008, on the other hand there are no regulations governing the transfer of Class III State Houses. In the form of a Flat with the implications regarding the status of the Flat Ownership Unit (<em>SHM Sarusun</em>) as well as the status of joint shares, common objects, and common land, whether it can be transferred and managed by the Association of Owners and Residents of Flats (<em>PPPSRS</em>) or still become State Property


2020 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
pp. 18
Author(s):  
Salma Suroyya Yuniyanti

A state holds constitutional responsibility of embodying physical, psychological welfare, and social justice for all of its citizens. Developing apartments is one of the Indonesian government's policy to ensure the embodiment of these responsibilities. Regulation on apartment that adheres to horizontal separation principle (<em>Horizontale scheiding beginnsel</em>) still often leads to a range of legal issues. Accordingly, it is necessary to find out and comprehend the philosophical foundation of the coherence of regulations concerning apartment. The present study applied normative legal method with statutory and conceptual approaches. In practice, horizontal separation principle is not well-implemented and is not in line with the Basic Agrarian Law (BAL). Right of Ownership of an apartment unit (HMSRS) is a personal right and is separated from common right upon shared objects, parts, and land. This phenomenon can lead to legal issues, particularly when the secondary rights (i.e., right to use building or right to use upon the state land and right to use building or right to use upon the right to manage) are no longer extended. The implementation of horizontal separation has not provided a legal certainty for the community regarding apartment unit ownership. Accordingly, in order to provide legal certainties, the government should enact Government Regulation as further stipulation of Law no. 20 of 2011.


Sensors ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 20 (15) ◽  
pp. 4201
Author(s):  
Yu-an Tan ◽  
Shuo Feng ◽  
Xiaochun Cheng ◽  
Yuanzhang Li ◽  
Jun Zheng

Information leaks can occur through many Android applications, including unauthorized access to sensors data. Hooking is an important technique for protecting Android applications and add security features to them even without its source code. Various hooking frameworks are developed to intercept events and process their own specific events. The hooking tools for Java methods are varied, however, the native hook has few methods. Besides, the commonly used Android hook frameworks cannot meet the requirement of hooking the native methods in shared libraries on non-root devices. Even though some approaches are able to hook these methods, they have limitations or are complicated to implement. In the paper, a feasible hooking approach for Android native methods is proposed and implemented, which does not need any modifications to both the Android framework and app’s code. In this approach, the method’s reference address is modified and control flow is redirected. Beyond that, this study combines this approach with VirtualXposed which aims to run it without root privileges. This hooking framework can be used to enforce security policies and monitor sensitive methods in shared objects. The evaluation of the scheme demonstrates its capability to perform hook operation without a significant runtime performance overhead on real devices and it is compatible and functional for the native hook.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Richard Philpot ◽  
Lasse Suonperä Liebst ◽  
Marie Rosenkrantz Lindegaard ◽  
Peter Verbeek ◽  
Mark Levine

Reconciliation is an aspect of natural conflict resolution with similar behaviour patterns documented in non-human primates, human children, and human adults in hunter gather societies. However, actual or potential post-conflict reconciliation behaviour amongst adults living in industrialized societies has rarely been studied systematically. In this paper, we observed naturally occurring conflicts between adults that were captured by public space security cameras in England. Reconciliation was found in in one-quarter of all conflicts and was significantly more prevalent in milder than in severe conflicts. Reconciliation typically occurred spontaneously between opponents – and was found both within friendship groups and across stranger groups. Reconciliation between opponents also appeared to be facilitated by peers, law enforcement, or shared objects. In some instances, reconciliation extended beyond the initial conflict dyad to include conciliatory interactions towards victimized third-party mediators. These findings add to a growing body of cross-cultural and cross-species evidence demonstrating the presence and function of post-conflict reconciliation Taken together, the paper extends knowledge about the repertoire of behaviours that form part of a reconciliation ethogram and introduces a typology of five reconciliation types that are central to the study of conciliation in post-conflict adult aggression.


2020 ◽  
Vol 34 (07) ◽  
pp. 12813-12820 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kaihua Zhang ◽  
Jin Chen ◽  
Bo Liu ◽  
Qingshan Liu

Object co-segmentation is to segment the shared objects in multiple relevant images, which has numerous applications in computer vision. This paper presents a spatial and semantic modulated deep network framework for object co-segmentation. A backbone network is adopted to extract multi-resolution image features. With the multi-resolution features of the relevant images as input, we design a spatial modulator to learn a mask for each image. The spatial modulator captures the correlations of image feature descriptors via unsupervised learning. The learned mask can roughly localize the shared foreground object while suppressing the background. For the semantic modulator, we model it as a supervised image classification task. We propose a hierarchical second-order pooling module to transform the image features for classification use. The outputs of the two modulators manipulate the multi-resolution features by a shift-and-scale operation so that the features focus on segmenting co-object regions. The proposed model is trained end-to-end without any intricate post-processing. Extensive experiments on four image co-segmentation benchmark datasets demonstrate the superior accuracy of the proposed method compared to state-of-the-art methods. The codes are available at http://kaihuazhang.net/.


We often assume that works of visual art are meant to be seen. Yet that assumption may be a modern prejudice. The ancient world - from China to Greece, Rome to Mexico - provides many examples of statues, paintings, and other images that were not intended to be visible. Instead of being displayed, they were hidden, buried, or otherwise obscured. In this third volume in the Visual Conversations in Art & Archaeology series, leading scholars working at the intersection of archaeology and the history of art address the fundamental question of art's visibility. What conditions must be met, what has to be in place, for a work of art to be seen at all? The answer is both historical and methodological; it concerns ancient societies and modern disciplines, and encompasses material circumstances, perceptual capacities, technologies of visualization, protocols of classification, and a great deal more. The emerging field of archaeological art history is uniquely suited to address such questions. Intrinsically comparative, this approach cuts across traditional ethnic, religious, and chronological categories to confront the academic present with the historical past. The goal is to produce a new art history that is at once cosmopolitan in method and global in scope, and in doing so establish new ways of seeing - new conditions of visibility - for shared objects of study.


2019 ◽  
Vol 3 (2) ◽  
pp. 94
Author(s):  
Suwardi S.H., M.HUM

Act No. 20 of 2011 on the towers to make the legal basis for vertical residential building whose ownership is shared objects, piece together and ground together. With Improved and national economic growth are positive also helped encourage and spur improve the provision of residential development condotel in several major cities in Indoenesia this happens because of the looseness of the Government's policy on the provision of building vertical form of the apartment plus more because of market demand and the people who continue to increase, especially for the middle to high society and it is believed Developer these conditions will continue to increase and grow as global developments that occurred in the decade as it is today. Thus the government, especially the Ministry of Housing (Kemenpera) must anticipate on these developments to immediately find a solution. Fulfillment of the housing needs in the form of building vertical shape of one of them can be done through the construction of residential apartments. Apartment development policy to be one attractive option to do both by government and private sector employers as the property as part of an urban housing development in the region, especially given the increasingly expensive and limited availability of land. Key words: Buyers, Apartments, Legal Protection.


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