DIMACS Workshop on Theft in E-Commerce: Content, Identity, and Service

2005-03-25 Thread Linda Casals

*
 
DIMACS Workshop on Theft in E-Commerce: Content, Identity, and Service 
  
  April 14 - 15, 2005
  DIMACS Center, Rutgers University, Piscataway, NJ

Organizers: 
   Drew Dean, SRI International, [EMAIL PROTECTED]  
   Markus Jakobsson, Indiana University, [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
 
Presented under the auspices of the Special Focus on Communication
Security and Information Privacy and is sponsored by RSA Security. 


This workshop is focusing on Theft in E-Commerce (of content, identity
and service). While theft is an old problem, the automated nature of
e-commerce introduces new opportunities for traditional forms of
theft, as well as entirely new forms of theft. The centrality of
computation makes these threats a part of computer security. This is
an area of research where we are seeing a lot of activity, and where
we believe there is a great potential for valuable research
contributions. While our primary interest is in defenses against
theft, we are also interested in novel attacks and real data about
attacks, as the defenders need to know what to defend against. It is
our hope that we could stimulate such research by bringing together
the leaders in this area, which is the very intention of this
workshop.

**
Workshop Program:
This is a preliminary program subject to change.

Thursday, April 14, 2005

 8:00 -  8:30 Registration and Breakfast

 8:30 -  8:45 Welcome and Opening Comments
  Fred Roberts, DIMACS Director

 8:45 -  9:45 Identity Theft: A Risk to Be Managed
  Richard A Parry, Consumer Risk Management, JPMorganChase

 9:45 - 10:15 Identity Theft and Legitimately - Minted Fraudulent Credentials
  Paul Van Oorschot, Carleton University, Canada

10:15 - 10:30 Break

10:30 - 11:15 Some are not thieves!
  Alexandr Andoni, MIT

11:00 - 11:30 Using Mutual Authentication to Fight Phishing
  Steve Myers, IUB

11:30 - 12:00 Building a Cryptovirus Using Microsoft's Cryptographic API
  Adam L: Young, LECG, LLC

12:00 -  1:30 Break

 1:30 -  2:00 An open - source USB token
  Hein Roehrig, University of Calgary

 2:00 -  2:30 Passwords Don't Get No Respect - - Or, How to Make the
  Most of (Weak) Shared Secrets
  Burt Kaliski, RSA Security 

 2:30 -  3:00 Blocking Phishing Spam: Pitfalls and Future Directions
  Minaxi Gupta, IUB  
 
 3:00 -  3:15 Break

 3:15 -  3:45 Phishing Countermeasures
  Aaron Emigh, Radix Labs

 3:45 -  4:15 Messin' with Texas: Deriving Mother's Maiden Names 
  Using Public Records
  Virgil Griffith, IUB 

Friday, April 15, 2005
 
 8:00 -  8:30 Breakfast and Registration

 8:30 -  9:15 Identity Theft: Methods and Prevention
  John Black, University of Colorado

 9:00 -  9:30 Preventing Theft in the Open
  Naftaly Minsky, Rutgers University

 9:30 - 10:15 Expressing Human Trust in Distributed Systems: the
  Mismatch Between Tools and Reality
  Sean Smith, Dartmouth College

10:00 - 10:15 Break

10:15 - 10:45 Separable Identity - Based Ring Signatures: Theoretical
  Foundations for Fighting Phishing Attacks
  Susan Hohenberger, MIT

10:45 - 11:15 Fighting Phishing Attacks: A Lightweight Trust
  Architecture for Detecting Spoofed Emails
  Ben Adida, MIT

11:15 - 11:45 How to Search Privately on Streaming Data
  Rafail Ostrovsky, UCLA

11:45 - 12:15 Distributed Phishing Attacks
  Markus Jakobsson, IUB, CACR

12:15 -  1:45 Lunch

 1:45 -  2:15 Are Peripheral Security Indicators Effective to 
  Prevent Phishing Attacks? 
  Min Wu, MIT

 2:15 -  2:45 Kleptography: The Outsider Inside Your Crypto Devices, 
  and its Trust Implications
  Moti Yung, Columbia University

 2:45 -  3:15 Safeguarding wireless service access
  Panos Papadimitratos,  Virginia Tech

 3:15 -  3:30 Break

 3:30 -  4:00 Social Networks and Trust Networks
  Jean Camp, IUB
 
 4:00 -  4:30 Fraud and Fraud Reduction on the Internet
  Bezalel Gavish, Southern Methodist University


**
Registration:

Pre-registration deadline: April 7, 2005

Please see website for registration information

  http://dimacs.rutgers.edu/Workshops/Intellectual/

*
Information on participation, registration, accomodations, and travel 
can be found at:

http://dimacs.rutgers.edu/Workshops/Intellectual/

   **PLEASE BE SURE TO PRE-REGISTER EARLY**






DIMACS Workshop on Theft in E-Commerce: Content, Identity, and Service

2005-02-04 Thread Linda Casals

CALL FOR PARTICIPATION**

*
 
DIMACS Workshop on Theft in E-Commerce: Content, Identity, and Service 
  
  April 14 - 15, 2005
  DIMACS Center, Rutgers University, Piscataway, NJ

Organizers: 
   Drew Dean, SRI International, [EMAIL PROTECTED]  
   Markus Jakobsson, Indiana University, [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
 
Presented under the auspices of the Special Focus on Communication
Security and Information Privacy.




On April 14-15, 2005, we will hold a DIMACS workshop at Rutgers University, 
NJ, on the topic of Theft in E-Commerce. This will include but not be 
limited to theft of content, of identity, and of service. While theft 
is an old problem, the automated nature of e-commerce introduces new 
opportunities for traditional forms of theft, as well as entirely new 
forms of theft.  The centrality of computation makes these threats a 
part of computer security.  This is an area of research where we are 
seeing a lot of activity, and where we believe there is a great 
potential for valuable research contributions. While our primary 
interest is in defenses against theft, we are also interested in novel 
attacks and real data about attacks, as the defenders need to know what 
to defend against. For more information about the workshop location, 
organization, and the program (once finalized), please see:
 
   http://dimacs.rutgers.edu/Workshops/Intellectual/

We are soliciting contributions in these areas, for both long and short 
presentations (approx 30 minutes vs 10 minutes.) There are no 
proceedings, but we request that presentation material is submitted to 
the organizers at the time of the workshop, allowing it to be posted on 
the DIMACS webpage. In order to propose a talk, please contact one of 
the organizers, Markus Jakobsson ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) or Drew Dean 
([EMAIL PROTECTED]) with a title and a short abstract by February 28,
2005 that allows us to determine whether your proposed talk will fit 
within the scope of the workshop.

Please refer to the information on the webpage above for workshop 
registration, hotel reservation and travel information, and information 
on how to apply for financial support for those in need of this. There 
will be a limited number of scholarships to defray travel costs, with 
priority given to students and speakers who can not receive funding to 
attend.

The workshop is sponsored by RSA Security. 

**
Registration:

Pre-registration deadline: April 7, 2005

Please see website for registration information.

*
Information on participation, registration, accomodations, and travel 
can be found at:

http://dimacs.rutgers.edu/Workshops/Intellectual/

   **PLEASE BE SURE TO PRE-REGISTER EARLY**





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DIMACS Workshop on Theft in E-Commerce: Content, Identity, and Service

2005-01-26 Thread Linda Casals

CALL FOR PARTICIPATION**

*
 
DIMACS Workshop on Theft in E-Commerce: Content, Identity, and Service 
  
  April 14 - 15, 2005
  DIMACS Center, Rutgers University, Piscataway, NJ

Organizers: 
   Drew Dean, SRI International, [EMAIL PROTECTED]  
   Markus Jakobsson, Indiana University, [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
 
Presented under the auspices of the Special Focus on Communication
Security and Information Privacy.




On April 14-15, 2005, we will hold a DIMACS workshop at Rutgers University, 
NJ, on the topic of Theft in E-Commerce. This will include but not be 
limited to theft of content, of identity, and of service. While theft 
is an old problem, the automated nature of e-commerce introduces new 
opportunities for traditional forms of theft, as well as entirely new 
forms of theft.  The centrality of computation makes these threats a 
part of computer security.  This is an area of research where we are 
seeing a lot of activity, and where we believe there is a great 
potential for valuable research contributions. While our primary 
interest is in defenses against theft, we are also interested in novel 
attacks and real data about attacks, as the defenders need to know what 
to defend against. For more information about the workshop location, 
organization, and the program (once finalized), please see:
 
   http://dimacs.rutgers.edu/Workshops/Intellectual/

We are soliciting contributions in these areas, for both long and short 
presentations (approx 30 minutes vs 10 minutes.) There are no 
proceedings, but we request that presentation material is submitted to 
the organizers at the time of the workshop, allowing it to be posted on 
the DIMACS webpage. In order to propose a talk, please contact one of 
the organizers, Markus Jakobsson ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) or Drew Dean 
([EMAIL PROTECTED]) with a title and a short abstract by February 28,
2005 that allows us to determine whether your proposed talk will fit 
within the scope of the workshop.

Please refer to the information on the webpage above for workshop 
registration, hotel reservation and travel information, and information 
on how to apply for financial support for those in need of this. There 
will be a limited number of scholarships to defray travel costs, with 
priority given to students and speakers who can not receive funding to 
attend.

The workshop is sponsored by RSA Security. 

**
Registration:

Pre-registration deadline: April 7, 2005

Please see website for registration information.

*
Information on participation, registration, accomodations, and travel 
can be found at:

http://dimacs.rutgers.edu/Workshops/Intellectual/

   **PLEASE BE SURE TO PRE-REGISTER EARLY**



-
The Cryptography Mailing List
Unsubscribe by sending unsubscribe cryptography to [EMAIL PROTECTED]