[Students-l] Fwd: [Air-L] IFIP Summerschool on Privacy & Identity Deadline extended to March 15

Michel Menou michel.menou at orange.fr
Sun Mar 3 05:03:40 EST 2013


> Date: Sat, 2 Mar 2013 16:12:14 +0100
> From: Seda Guerses<sguerses at esat.kuleuven.be>
> To:air-l at listserv.aoir.org
> Subject: [Air-L] Fwd: IFIP Summerschool on Privacy & Identity:
> 	Deadline	extended to March 15
>
>
>
>
>> Subject: IFIP Summerschool on Privacy & Identity: Deadline extended to March 15
>>
>> ************************************************************************
>> *                                                                      *
>> *		           CALL FOR PAPERS                             *
>> *                                                                      *
>> *                   (deadline extended to March 15)                    *
>> *                                                                      *
>> *		  Eighth International Summer School                   *
>> *			  organised jointly                            *
>> *      by the IFIP Working Groups 9.2, 9.5, 9.6/11.7, 11.4, 11.6       *
>> *                                                                      *
>> *		 Privacy and Identity Management for                   *
>> *		  Emerging Services and Technologies                   *
>> *		      (IFIP Summer School 2013)                        *
>> *                                                                      *
>> *	   Hosted by PI.lab / Radboud University Nijmegen,             *
>> *		      Nijmegen, the Netherlands                        *
>> *                                                                      *
>> *			   17-21 June, 2013                            *
>> *                                                                      *
>> * in cooperation with A4Cloud, ABC4Trust, PRISMS, DigiDeas, FutureID   *
>> *                                                                      *
>> ************************************************************************
>>
>> Current trends such as Web 2.0, mobile applications, cloud computing,
>> big data analysis and sensor technologies mean processing more and
>> more personal information. In this situation, the privacy of
>> individuals is at stake. In 2012, several legislative initiatives that
>> may foster better privacy protection were proposed, among others the
>> US Consumer Privacy Bill of Rights, Australia's Privacy Amendment
>> (Enhancing Privacy Protection) Bill and the European Data Protection
>> Regulation that promotes "data protection by design" as well as "data
>> protection by default". In addition, the European Commission has
>> proclaimed 2013 Year of the Citizens.
>>
>> Yet how can the individuals' privacy rights be effectively achieved
>> considering the rapid changes and massive challenges stemming from
>> emerging information and communication technologies and services? What
>> frameworks and tools do we need to gain, regain and maintain
>> informational self-determination and lifelong privacy?
>>
>> These questions will be addressed by the IFIP Summer School 2013 on
>> Privacy and Identity Management for Emerging Services and
>> Technologies. The Summer School organisation will be a joint effort of
>> IFIP (International Federation for Information Processing, Working
>> Groups 9.2, 9.5, 9.6/11.7, 11.4, 11.6) and several European and
>> national projects. The IFIP Summer School 2013 will bring together
>> junior and senior researchers and practitioners from multiple
>> disciplines to discuss important questions concerning privacy and
>> identity management and related issues.
>>
>> We are especially inviting contributions from students who are at the
>> stage of preparing either a master's or a doctoral thesis. The school
>> is interactive in character, and is composed of keynote lectures and
>> workshops with master/PhD student presentations. The principle is to
>> encourage young academic and industry entrants to the privacy and
>> identity management world to share their own ideas, build up a
>> collegial relationship with others, gain experience in making
>> presentations, and potentially publish a paper through the resulting
>> book proceedings. Students that actively participate, in particular
>> those who present a paper, can receive a course certificate which
>> awards 3 ECTS at the PhD level. The certificate can certify the topic
>> of the contributed paper so as to demonstrate its relation or
>> non-relation to the student's master's/PhD thesis.
>>
>> Basic elements of the Summer School
>> -----------------------------------
>>
>> The Summer School takes a holistic approach to society and technology
>> and supports interdisciplinary exchange in the keynote lectures,
>> tutorials and workshops. In particular, participants' contributions
>> that combine technical, legal, regulatory, socio-economic, social or
>> societal, ethical, anthropological, philosophical, or psychological
>> perspectives are welcome. The interdisciplinary character of the work
>> is fundamental to the school.
>>
>> Confirmed keynote speakers at this moment are David Lyon (Queen's
>> University), Jan Camenisch (IBM Z?rich), Simone Fischer-H?bner (Karlstad
>> University), Yannis Stamitiou (University of Patras), Rodica Tirtea
>> (ENISA), Eleni Kosta (TILT), Sianni Pearson (HP Labs), Alessandro
>> Acquisti (CMU), Bart Jacobs (RU Nijmegen), Colin Bennett (University of
>> Victoria) and Luciano Floridi (University of Hertfordshire).
>>
>> Workshops held during the Summer School week are targeted at
>> optimising student involvement. They are aimed at giving the most
>> effective feedback possible to students on their work. They are not
>> intended for submissions by established researchers or industrialists.
>>
>> Related European, national, or regional/community research projects as
>> well as other senior researchers are also very welcome to present
>> papers or to organise workshops as part of the Summer School.
>>
>> An award for the best student paper submitted and presented will be
>> organised, which will be handed out during the Summer School week. The
>> paper should be written by the master/PhD student herself or
>> himself. Any contribution to the paper by other researchers should be
>> made clear.
>>
>> Contributions
>> -------------
>>
>> We welcome: research papers from all disciplines (e.g., computer
>> science, economics, law, psychology, sociology and other social
>> sciences); contributions on application scenarios, use cases, and good
>> practices; research with an empirical focus; and interdisciplinary
>> work. Contributions will be selected by the Summer School Programme
>> Committee based on an extended abstract review. See Important dates
>> and details (below) for the length of the abstract.
>>
>> The contributions should contain a concise problem statement, an
>> outline, and clear messages (they should not be about work "to be
>> done"). Accepted short versions of papers will be made available to
>> all participants in the Summer School Pre-Proceedings. After the
>> Summer School, authors will have the opportunity to submit their final
>> full papers which will be extended to 8 pages in length (and will
>> address questions and aspects raised during the Summer School) for
>> publication in the Summer School Proceedings published by the official
>> IFIP publisher (Springer). The papers to be included in the Final
>> Proceedings will again be reviewed and selected by the Summer School
>> Programme Committee. Students are expected to try to publish their
>> work through this volume.
>>
>> Topics of interest include, but are not limited to:
>>
>> - privacy and identity management (services, technologies,
>> infrastructures, usability aspects, legal and socio-economic aspects),
>> - privacy-enhancing technologies (PETs),
>> - transparency-enhancing technologies (TETs),
>> - multilateral security,
>> - anonymity and pseudonymity,
>> - individual's rights concerning privacy and identity management,
>> - privacy metrics,
>> - privacy protection goals,
>> - assurance evaluation and control,
>> - privacy impact assessment,
>> - privacy by design and privacy by default,
>> - privacy standardisation,
>> - trust management and reputation systems,
>> - lifelong privacy challenges and sustainable privacy and identity
>> management,
>> - privacy and trust policies,
>> - privacy-aware web service composition,
>> - semantic web security and privacy,
>> - profiling and tracking technologies,
>> - social network and big data analysis,
>> - surveillance and sensor networks,
>> - data retention and law enforcement,
>> - privacy issues relating to eIDs, social networks, biometrics, and
>> cloud computing,
>> - data breaches and cybercrime,
>> - impact of legislative or regulatory initiatives on privacy,
>> - impact of technology on social exclusion/digital divide/social and
>> cultural aspects
>> - privacy, identity, social accountability or social responsibility.
>>
>> General Summer School Chair:	
>>
>> - Ronald Leenes, Tilburg University
>>
>> Programme Committee Co-Chairs:	
>>
>> - Marit Hansen, ULD
>> - Jaap-Henk Hoepman, Radboud University Nijmegen
>> - Diane Whitehouse, The Castlegate Consultancy
>>
>> Important dates
>> ---------------
>>
>> Submission deadline for extended abstracts:	 March 15, 2013
>> (2,000-3,000 words in Springer LNCS format, PDF) and workshop proposals:
>>
>>
>> Notification of acceptance: 	    	    	 April 7th, 2013
>> Short paper (up to 8 pages) for preroceedings: 	 May 15th, 2013
>> Final paper: 	     	    			 September 1st, 2013
>> Notification of acceptance of the final paper: 	 October 15th, 2013
>>
>> Additional information
>> ----------------------
>>
>> Submission Website:
>>
>> https://www.easychair.org/conferences/?conf=ifipsummerschool2013
>>
>> Summer School Website:
>>
>> http://www.pilab.nl/ifip-summerschool-2013/
>>
>> The submission address for extended abstracts and workshop proposals
>> will be accessible via the Summer School Website
>> (http://www.pilab.nl/ifip-summerschool-2013/) soon.
>>
>> Programme Committee
>> -------------------
>>
>> Rose-Mharie ?hlfeldt, University of Sk?vde
>> Michele Bezzi, SAP	
>> Katrin Borcea-Pfitzmann, Technische Universit?t Dresden
>> Caspar Bowden
>> Sonja Buchegger, KTH
>> Bruno Crispo, University of Trento
>> Colette Cuijpers, Tilburg University
>> Bart De Decker, K. U. Leuven
>> Claudia Diaz, K. U. Leuven
>> Penny	Duquenoy, Middlesex University
>> Simone Fischer-Huebner, Karlstad University
>> Michael Friedewald, Fraunhofer Institute for Systems and Innovation
>> Research ISI
>> Carlisle George, Middlesex University
>> Thomas Gross, University of Newcastle upon Tyne
>> Seda Gurses, K. U. Leuven
>> Serge Gutwirth, VUB
>> Martin Gilje Jaatun, SINTEF ICT
>> Audun	Josang, University of Oslo
>> Thomas Keenan, University of Calgary
>> Kai Kimppa, University of Turku
>> Markulf Kohlweiss, Microsoft
>> Bert-Jaap Koops, Tilburg University
>> Eleni Kosta, Tilburg University
>> Ioannis Krontiris, Goethe University Frankfurt
>> Louise Leenen, CSIR
>> Ronald Leenes, Tilburg University
>> Chris Mitchell, Royal Holloway, University of London
>> Refik Molva, EURECOM
>> Norberto Patrignani, Politecnico of Torino
>> Siani Pearson, HP Labs
>> Charles Raab, University of Edinburgh
>> Kai Rannenberg, Goethe University Frankfurt
>> Heiko Ro?nagel, Fraunhofer IAO
>> Joseph Savirimuthu, University of Liverpool	
>> Johanneke Siljee, TNO
>> Einar Snekkenes, Gjvik University College
>> Bibi Van Den Berg, Leiden University
>> Irma van der Ploeg, Hogeschool Zuyd
>> Mario Verdicchio, University of Bergamo	
>> Jozef Vyskoc, VaF
>> Martin Warnke, University of L?neburg
>> Erik W?stlund, Karlstad University
>> David Wright, Trilateral Research & Consulting
>> Tal Zarsky, U. of Haifa/NYU Law School
>>


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