NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory is helping DARPA with its digital document problems.
Using the freely available Common Crawl public repository of web crawl information as a starting point, JPL researchers identified PDFs to add to the collection, including those that were incomplete due to Common Crawl's download limit of 1 megabyte per downloaded file. JPL then accessed those PDF URLs directly to download the full documents, ensuring a fully representative archive of the types of PDFs accessible on the web.
By making the collection available to the public, JPL hopes researchers will be able to use and analyze the PDFs to identify better ways of securing the information these documents contain.
Malaysia Latest News, Malaysia Headlines
Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.
Billionaire Dem donor flew top Biden official to secret ritzy retreat on private jetEXCLUSIVE: Former Google CEO Eric Schmidt flew a former top White House adviser on his private jet from Washington, D.C., to a secretive retreat in Montana.
Read more »
How NASCAR, Jet Dryer Helped Open I-95 in PhiladelphiaJuan Pablo Montoya's incident at the 2012 Daytona 500 might have been the last time a NASCAR jet dryer made national news.
Read more »
F-16 is the greatest fighter jet of all time and we have the receiptsF-16 is the greatest fighter jet of all time and we have the receipts. They defend NATO against Russia and help Taiwan stand up to China. F-16s have earned the top spot.
Read more »
Texas airline worker killed after being sucked into Delta Air Lines jet engineAn airport worker was killed at a San Antonio airport after being sucked into into a Delta Air Lines jet engine. The worker's death is under investigation.
Read more »
NASA downplays its role in making doomed Titan subNASA and OceanGate formed a partnership years ago. NASA now says OceanGate overstated the agency's role in developing the destroyed submersible.
Read more »
NASA opposes lithium mining at tabletop flat Nevada desert site used to calibrate satellitesThe latest challenge to lithium mining in Nevada in the push for cleaner energy comes from a place where no opposition has arisen before: space. At NASA's request, U.S. land managers have withdrawn about 36 square miles of federal land from potential mineral exploration and mining at a desert site 250 miles northeast of Las Vegas. The U.S. space agency says the unusually flat desert tract above the lithium deposit must be left undisturbed because the unique topography is used to calibrate razor-sharp measurements for hundreds of satellites orbiting overhead. A Nevada congressman has introduced legislation opposing the removal of the tract as a potential lithium mining site.
Read more »