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Omar Ali

Researcher at American University of the Middle East

Publications -  54
Citations -  956

Omar Ali is an academic researcher from American University of the Middle East. The author has contributed to research in topics: Cloud computing & Cloud computing security. The author has an hindex of 11, co-authored 50 publications receiving 419 citations. Previous affiliations of Omar Ali include University of Zakho & University of Southern Queensland.

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The state of play of blockchain technology in the financial services sector: A systematic literature review

TL;DR: A systematic review of scholarly articles on blockchain technology in the financial sector is presented, which presents a classification framework that has three dimensions: blockchain-enabled financial benefits, challenges, and functionality.
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Cloud computing-enabled healthcare opportunities, issues, and applications: a systematic review

TL;DR: This research study presents a systematic review of scholarly articles of cloud computing in the healthcare sector to present a classification framework that has three dimensions: cloud computing-enabled healthcare opportunities, issues, and applications.
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A Comparative Study: Blockchain Technology Utilization Benefits, Challenges and Functionalities

TL;DR: In this article, the benefits, challenges, and functionalities of blockchain applications in different sectors are explored and compared based on factors in three dimensions, which were categorized as benefits (informational, technological, economic, organizational and strategic), challenges (technological, organizational, adoption, operational, and environmental and sustainability), and functionality (point-to-point transmission, data ownership, data protection, and transaction processing).
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Cloud computing technology adoption: an evaluation of key factors in local governments

TL;DR: The research results show that the factors which had a statistically significant and positive impact on the adoption of cloud-based services in local governments were compatibility, complexity, cost, security concerns, expected benefits and organization size.
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Assessing information security risks in the cloud: A case study of Australian local government authorities

TL;DR: This study identifies and explores the critical factors associated with information security requirements of cloud services within the Australian regional local government context and proposes a conceptual cloud computing security requirements model with four components – data security; risk assessment; legal & compliance requirements; and business & technical requirements.