Apologies if you receive multiple copies of this CFP. 

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1st International Workshop on Society, Privacy and the Semantic Web - Policy 
and Technology (PrivOn 2013) 
at the 12th International Semantic Web Conference (ISWC) 
October 21st-25th, 2013, Sydney, Australia 

http://privon.semanticweb.org/ 
Twitter: @privonws #privon2013 

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Bruce Schneier's recent article "The Internet is a surveillance state" 
summarises the state of Internet privacy in its concluding paragraphs: 
"So, we're done. Welcome to a world where Google knows exactly what sort of 
porn you all like, and more about your interests than your spouse does. Welcome 
to a world where your cell phone company knows exactly where you are all the 
time. Welcome to the end of private conversations, because increasingly your 
conversations are conducted by e­mail, text, or social networking sites. And 
welcome to a world where all of this, and everything else that you do or is 
done on a computer, is saved, correlated, studied, passed around from company 
to company without your knowledge or consent; and where the government accesses 
it at will without a warrant. Welcome to an Internet without privacy, and we've 
ended up here with hardly a fight." 

While Schneier's article indicates his opinion, we see supporting evidence all 
around us. It is time to accept reality and think about implications and 
necessary actions. It is time to open our eyes, to review the situation we are 
in, to identify the societal and economic forces at work ­ on a national and 
international level ­and define a way forward as a society. 

We (the Semantic Web community) are responsible for the conception of 
technologies that enable large scale integration and mining of personal and 
public information in all domains of society. This brings unprecedented 
advantages, assists humans, organisations and systems with problem solving, 
enables innovation and increases productivity. It makes everything more 
transparent. However this transparency comes at a price: the loss of our 
privacy. There has been growing awareness within the community of the need to 
address privacy and security concerns. To date the focus has been on 
researching specific privacy and security models and frameworks, for example 
for access control, obfuscation, anonymization, aggregation, licensing, etc. 
However we are "putting the cart before the horse", we need to identify clear 
privacy and security requirements before proposing technical solutions. 

With this workshop we aim at the following goals: 
* First, raise awareness that the technologies the community are working on 
have global societal consequences. Vice versa, our research can be guided by 
determining a road map for desirable privacy goals. We aim to determine first 
steps towards identifying desirable goals. 
* Second, raise awareness of interconnections between the different communities 
that are involved in Web privacy and security ­ e.g., policy makers, users, 
social sciences and computer scientists and provide a platform for 
interconnection and communication. 
* Third, determine the next steps that need to be conducted in order to broaden 
the level of engagement between the relevant parties 

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Topics Of Interest 

The topics of this workshop are different from previous workshops and events, 
which were usually focused on technology. This workshop aims to capture the 
intersection between society, policy and technology. Therefore we structure the 
topics in three main areas as follows. 

Society and privacy 
* Case studies: what are the societal privacy implications of semantic 
technologies? 
* What is the impact of semantic technologies on privacy in specific domain? 
* What are appropriate societal conventions to protect privacy? 
* What are desirable privacy situations? 
* When do we want to control information flow? 
* Privacy awareness in social communities 

Legal and policy perspective of privacy 
* Managing personal information disclosure 
* What laws support privacy management and enforcement? 
* What new legislation might be necessary? 
* Privacy legislation compliance 
* How to influence policy making? 
* How to synchronise policies of different legal domains? 
* Personal data and the role of the data controller/processor 

Technology perspective 
* How can societal conventions be supported by technologies? 
* Anonymity and identity discovery 
* Techniques for anonymity, pseudonymity and unlinkability 
* Privacy implications of data integration and data linking 
* Protecting against pattern/behaviour discovery and community mining 
* Protecting against data falsification 
* Non-repudiation and digital signatures 
* Usage control and accountability 
* Data provenance and trustworthiness of knowledge sources 

You can also join our discussion page to make suggestions, and coordinate the 
discussion pre-workshop. 

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Format and Submission Procedure

Contributions to the workshop can be made in terms of papers and reports as 
well as position papers addressing different issues of the stated topics of 
interest. 

Papers and reports should not be not longer than 12 pages using the LNCS Style. 
Papers and report contributions should be prepared in PDF format and should be 
submitted (no later than July 12th, 2013) through the workshop submission site 
at: https://www.easychair.org/conferences/?conf=privon2013

Position contributions are accepted as position posts or position videos in the 
associated PrivOn Google Community. Position contributions should not exceed 
1000 words and should be handled according to the guidelines for technical 
papers as much as possible. Position videos should not exceed 5 minutes.

Papers and reports will be reviewed and a limited number of those will be 
selected for presentation. 

Position contributions that generate interesting discussions in the Google 
Community will be selected for short presentations. Position statements may be 
used to select participants based on available capacity to ensure an 
heterogeneous audience during the Workshop.

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Important Dates 

July 12, 2013 : Paper Submission Deadline 
August 9, 2013 : Notification of Accepted Technical Papers (and Position 
Papers) 
September 9, 2013 : Final Version Due 
October 21st or 22nd, 2013 : PrivOn 2013 Workshop 

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Organising Committee 

Stefan Decker, DERI, NUI Galway, Ireland 
Email:[email protected] 
Web: http://www.stefandecker.org 

Jim Hendler, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, USA 
Email: [email protected] 
Web: http://www.cs.rpi.edu/~hendler/ <http://www.cs.rpi.edu/%7Ehendler/>  

Sabrina Kirrane, DERI, NUI Galway, Ireland 
Email:[email protected] 
Web: http://www.sabrinakirrane.com/ 

For questions regarding the workshop, please contact [email protected] 
or use the discussion facilities at the PrivOn Google Community. 







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