CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedicationhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
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The Illegal Dump Site dataset includes information on illegal dump sites, their type of trash, and the estimate tons of trash at each site. The information was provided by Allegheny Cleanways, and collected as part of a 2005 survey in Allegheny County.
Support for Health Equity datasets and tools provided by Amazon Web Services (AWS) through their Health Equity Initiative.
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This data dump is sourced from the various sites in the Stack Exchange network of Q&A sites. This dump contains data up to and including 2025-03-31. The exact licenses for each bit of content is embedded in each entry. For license date ranges, see the root-level license.txt, or . For the schema, see the sede-and-data-dump-schema.md file within each .7z This torrent has also been archived at
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The dataset contains year- and state-wise compiled data on the number of existing and reclaimed/capped waste dumpsites and the number of dumpsites which have been converted to landfills
The Permian Basin, straddling New Mexico and Texas, is one of the most productive oil and gas (OG) provinces in the United States. OG production yields large volumes of wastewater that contain elevated concentrations of major ions including salts (also referred to as brines), and trace organic and inorganic constituents. These OG wastewaters pose unknown environmental health risks, particularly in the case of accidental or intentional releases. Releases of OG wastewaters have resulted in water-quality and environmental health effects at sites in West Virginia (Akob, et al., 2016, Orem et al. 2017, Kassotis et al. 2016) and in the Williston Basin region in Montana and North Dakota (Cozzarelli et al. 2017, Cozzarelli et al. 2021, Lauer et al. 2016, Gleason et al. 2014, and Mills et al. 2011). Starting in November 2017, 39 illegal dumps of OG wastewater were identified in southeastern New Mexico on public lands by the Bureau of Land Management (BLM). Illegal dumping is an unpermitted release of waste materials that is in violation of Federal and State laws including the U.S. Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (U.S. EPA, 1976), Federal Land Policy and Management Act (U.S. DOI, 2016; 43 USC 1701(a)(8); 43 USC 1733(g)), the State of New Mexico’s Oil and Gas Act (New Mexico Legislature. 2019), and New Mexico Administrative Code § 19.15.34.20. To evaluate the effects of these releases, changes in soil geochemistry and microbial community structure at 6 sites were analyzed by comparing soils from within OG wastewater dump-affected zones to corresponding unaffected (control) soils. In addition, the effects on local vegetation were evaluated by measuring the chemistry of 4 plant species from dump-affected and control zones at a single site. Samples of local produced waters were geochemically and isotopically characterized to link soil geochemistry to reservoir geochemistry. These data sets included field observations; soil water extractable inorganic chemical composition, pH, strontium (Sr) isotopes, and specific conductance; bulk soil Raman, carbon (C), nitrogen (N), mercury (Hg), radium (Ra) and thorium (Th) isotopes, and percent moisture; plant inorganic chemical composition; and soil microbial community composition data. At each site, triplicate soil samples were collected from dump-affected and control zones and duplicate field samples were collected at each site. Plant biomass was collected in triplicate from dump-affected and control zones at a single site. This data release includes eleven data tables provided as machine readable 'comma-separated values' format (*.csv): T01_Permian_Data_Dictionary.csv, the entity and attribute metadata section for tables T02-T11 in table format; T02_Soil_Geochemistry.csv, descriptions of sampling sites and concentrations of major anions, cations, and trace elements from the soil samples; T03_Plant_Geochemistry.csv, concentrations of major anions, cations, trace elements, and Sr isotopes from the vegetation samples; T04_Soil_Isotopes.csv, Sr, Ra, and Th isotopes from the soils; T05_Raman_Counts.csv, Raman spectra counts from the soil samples; T06_Raman_Band_Separation.csv, Raman band separation from selected soil samples; T07_Soil_Organics_Spectra.csv, spectral data of alkane unresolved complex mixtures (UCMs) from soil extracts; T08_Soil_Organics_Summary.csv, a summary of alkane UCMs from soil extracts; T09_Soil_16S_BIOM.csv, microbial operational taxonomic units from the soils; T10_Produced_Water.csv, selected geochemistry and isotopic measurements from produced water samples; T11_Limits_AnalyticalMethods.csv, a listing of analytical detection limits.
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This data dump is sourced from the various sites in the Stack Exchange network of Q&A sites. This dump contains data up to and including 2024-06-30. This version was re-released in late August with bugfixes from the initial, flawed 2024-06-30 release The exact licenses for each bit of content is embedded in each entry. For license date ranges, see the root-level license.txt, or . For the schema, see the sede-and-data-dump-schema.md file within each .7z This torrent has been mirrored from
Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
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Irish Dump Site [OSPAR]. Published by Marine Institute. Available under the license Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 (CC-BY-4.0).The OSPAR Convention is the current legal instrument guiding international cooperation on the protection of the marine environment of the North-East Atlantic. Work under the Convention is managed by the OSPAR Commission, made up of representatives of the Governments of 15 Contracting Parties and the European Commission, representing the European Community. This spatial dataset covers the location of marine dumping sites....
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This data dump is sourced from the various sites in the Stack Exchange network of Q&A sites. This dump contains data up to and including 2024-06-30. This is the original release of the 2024-06-30 data dump, with some export issues. The exact licenses for each bit of content is embedded in each entry. For license date ranges, see the root-level license.txt, or . For the schema, see the sede-and-data-dump-schema.md file within each .7z This torrent has been mirrored from , though due to upload problems, the torrent was not auto-generated by archive.org.
Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
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Air quality data around Dandora damp site
A review of oceanographic data in the Prince Rupert to evaluate suitable sites for ocean dumping. The review includes assessments of data on historic use of dump sites in the region, physical oceanography, biological resources, sediment bedload transport, etc.
Subscribers can find out export and import data of 23 countries by HS code or product’s name. This demo is helpful for market analysis.
The Kansas Department of Health and Environment's (KDHE) Bureau of Waste Management (BWM) administers the Old City Dump Cleanup Program through its Dump Cleanup Program. The Old City Dump Cleanup Program provides funds to cities or counties for the repair of old, unused municipal dump sites. These sites primarily operated between the 1940s and the 1970s before many counties had landfills and prior to the current regulations for solid waste disposal. A change to permitted landfills in the 1970s led to the abandonment of some old city dumps, or improper long-term care that allowed the soil covers to become damaged over time. When the regulations were put into place, these dump sites were no longer used.For more information, please KDHE Old City Dump Cleanup ProgramTo view the data in a web map viewer: Closed City Dump Web MapMap Exclusions: The data in the map is rarely updated, as the Old City Dumps have been closed since 1970's. If the data is updated, it will be using ArcGIS Scripting from the original database. Scripting will not update the ArcGIS Online "item updated" date, which only reflects the last time the ArcGIS Online item page was last updated. Information presented in the Map Viewer has been obtained from a range of sources of varying age, reliability and resolution. Many of the sites were visited in early 2000's and sites GPS, not all have been verified.KDHE makes no assurances of the accuracy or validity of information presented in the Map Viewer.
The sites are primarily solid waste disposal sites, including municipal solid waste, industrial solid waste, residual solid waste, and construction and demolition debris. Some sites with hazardous waste are also included. The types of sites may include licensed landfills, landfills that existed prior to state regulatory programs, exempt waste sites, unauthorized dumps, open dumps, and disposal lagoons. Some sites in the database may have been partially or fully remediated and may no longer contain significant amounts of waste. The data are incomplete and are still in development. New locations will be added and existing locations may be corrected. This file does not include all sites regulated by Ohio EPA under other regulatory programs (e.g. there are many sites regulated under programs such as hazardous waste sites, surface water, "brownfields", etc. that are not included in this dataset). Data were developed from Ohio EPA archival files. The accuracy of the locations depends on the available information. Where possible, points were located on the actual waste unit, or within the tax parcel boundary where the waste was said to be located. Some points were located using coordinates or descriptive text in field notes, inspection reports, etc. In some cases, the best available information is the nearest intersection or an address. When possible the data were compared against local tax maps to improve the accuracy of the locations. Additional sources of information included but were not limited to newspaper archives, solid waste district plans, pollution inventories, historical societies, and local governments. The information used in this dataset come from files that date back to the late 1960s and may not represent the current site conditions. The data includes only that known to Ohio EPA's solid waste regulatory program and may not include sites that were under past authority of other regulatory agencies such as local health departments.
OPEN_DUMPS_IDEM_IN is a point shapefile that contains open dump site locations in Indiana, provided by personnel of Indiana Department of Environmental Management, Office of Land Quality (IDEM, OLQ) as of July 11, 2003 and was subsequently updated on June 3, 2004, January 4, 2005, April 25, 2005, July 27, 2006, January 24, 2007, June 4, 2009, October 20, 2009, and April 16, 2010. The data set provided by IDEM was in an ESRI geodatabase format and the feature class was named "OPEN_DUMP." OPEN_DUMPS_IDEM_IN is attributed with facility names and federal identification numbers. The following is excerpted from the metadata provided by IDEM, OLQ for the source shapefile OPEN_DUMP: "This dataset consists of Open Dumps - Sites that are not regulated and are illegal dump sites of solid waste, as defined by IAC 10-2-28 329 and IAC 10-2-128 of the Indiana Administrative Code."
Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
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Description
The datasets demonstrate the malware economy and the value chain published in our paper, Malware Finances and Operations: a Data-Driven Study of the Value Chain for Infections and Compromised Access, at the 12th International Workshop on Cyber Crime (IWCC 2023), part of the ARES Conference, published by the International Conference Proceedings Series of the ACM ICPS.
Using the well-documented scripts, it is straightforward to reproduce our findings. It takes an estimated 1 hour of human time and 3 hours of computing time to duplicate our key findings from MalwareInfectionSet; around one hour with VictimAccessSet; and minutes to replicate the price calculations using AccountAccessSet. See the included README.md files and Python scripts.
We choose to represent each victim by a single JavaScript Object Notation (JSON) data file. Data sources provide sets of victim JSON data files from which we've extracted the essential information and omitted Personally Identifiable Information (PII). We collected, curated, and modelled three datasets, which we publish under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
1. MalwareInfectionSet
We discover (and, to the best of our knowledge, document scientifically for the first time) that malware networks appear to dump their data collections online. We collected these infostealer malware logs available for free. We utilise 245 malware log dumps from 2019 and 2020 originating from 14 malware networks. The dataset contains 1.8 million victim files, with a dataset size of 15 GB.
2. VictimAccessSet
We demonstrate how Infostealer malware networks sell access to infected victims. Genesis Market focuses on user-friendliness and continuous supply of compromised data. Marketplace listings include everything necessary to gain access to the victim's online accounts, including passwords and usernames, but also detailed collection of information which provides a clone of the victim's browser session. Indeed, Genesis Market simplifies the import of compromised victim authentication data into a web browser session. We measure the prices on Genesis Market and how compromised device prices are determined. We crawled the website between April 2019 and May 2022, collecting the web pages offering the resources for sale. The dataset contains 0.5 million victim files, with a dataset size of 3.5 GB.
3. AccountAccessSet
The Database marketplace operates inside the anonymous Tor network. Vendors offer their goods for sale, and customers can purchase them with Bitcoins. The marketplace sells online accounts, such as PayPal and Spotify, as well as private datasets, such as driver's licence photographs and tax forms. We then collect data from Database Market, where vendors sell online credentials, and investigate similarly. To build our dataset, we crawled the website between November 2021 and June 2022, collecting the web pages offering the credentials for sale. The dataset contains 33,896 victim files, with a dataset size of 400 MB.
Credits Authors
Funding
This project has received funding from the European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under project numbers 804476 (SCARE) and 952622 (SPIRS).
Alternative links to download: AccountAccessSet, MalwareInfectionSet, and VictimAccessSet.
Attribution 2.5 (CC BY 2.5)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/
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This is data collected during dredging by the Townsville Port Authority in Cleveland Bay in 1993. Data are divided into a number of main groups: Wind, tide gauge, wave rider, S4, sediment traps, …Show full descriptionThis is data collected during dredging by the Townsville Port Authority in Cleveland Bay in 1993. Data are divided into a number of main groups: Wind, tide gauge, wave rider, S4, sediment traps, water samples and nephelometers. Unique site numbers were assigned within Cleveland Bay at which data were collected. Some of these sites were named, and others were unnamed.
Attribution 2.5 (CC BY 2.5)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/
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This metadata record covers a subset of the data collected during dredging by the Townsville Port Authority in Cleveland Bay in 1993. Data are divided into a number of main groups: Wind, tide …Show full descriptionThis metadata record covers a subset of the data collected during dredging by the Townsville Port Authority in Cleveland Bay in 1993. Data are divided into a number of main groups: Wind, tide gauge, wave rider, S4, sediment traps, water samples and nephelometers. The data are grouped according to collection method and sampling location. See the metadata record title for collection method and geographic extent for the sampling location. Unique site numbers were assigned within Cleveland Bay at which data were collected. Some of these sites were named, and others were unnamed.
The Pre-Regulatory Landfill (PRLF) program was established in 2007 to address pre-1983 non-industrial landfills and dumps. A pre-regulatory landfill is defined as any land area, whether publicly or privately owner, on which municipal solid waste disposal occurred prior to January 1, 1983, but not thereafter and does not include any landfill used primarily for industrial solid waste. The PRLF program conducts the assessment and remediation of these sites directly. Local governments may conduct the assessment work and seek reimbursement of expenses if the work was pre-approved by the Program.To learn more about the PRLF program, visit their website HERE
Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
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Production MySQL database dump for the Schiller Lab C-Terminome Web Application.Web App Page: http://cterminome.bio-toolkit.com/Project Home Page: http://bio-toolkit.com/C-terminome/project/
Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
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See https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Data_dumps for more detail on using these dumps.
Open Government Licence - Canada 2.0https://open.canada.ca/en/open-government-licence-canada
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Data with the following information for small landfills: * open/closed status * site owner * site location * Certificate of Approval number This dataset was last updated in 2014 and contains out of date information. It has been replaced by the Ontario landfills dataset.
CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedicationhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
License information was derived automatically
The Illegal Dump Site dataset includes information on illegal dump sites, their type of trash, and the estimate tons of trash at each site. The information was provided by Allegheny Cleanways, and collected as part of a 2005 survey in Allegheny County.
Support for Health Equity datasets and tools provided by Amazon Web Services (AWS) through their Health Equity Initiative.