[Publicity-list]: DIMACS Workshop on Usable Privacy and Security Software

2004-05-25 Thread Linda Casals

*
 
DIMACS Workshop on Usable Privacy and Security Software
  
 July 7 - 8, 2004
 DIMACS Center, Rutgers University, Piscataway, NJ

Organizers: 

 Lorrie Cranor, Chair, ATT, [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
 Mark Ackerman, University of Michigan, [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
 Fabian Monrose, Johns Hopkins University, [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
 Andrew Patrick, NRC Canada, [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
 Norman Sadeh, Carnegie Mellon University, [EMAIL PROTECTED] 

Presented under the auspices of the Special Focus on Communication
Security and Information Privacy.



This workshop and working group is intended to bring together security
and privacy experts with human-computer interaction experts to discuss
approaches to developing more usable privacy and security
software. The workshop sessions on July 7 and July 8 will include
invited talks and discussion. July 9 will feature a working group of
invited participants who will spend the day identifying important
problems, discussing some of the research issues raised during the
workshop in more depth, and brainstorming about approaches to future
research, collaboration, and more user-centered design of security and
privacy software.

**
Participation:

Participation in the workshop is open to anyone who registers (no
submission necessary).

**
Program:

Wednesday, July 7, 2004

 8:15 -  8:50  Breakfast and Registration - CoRE Bldg., 4th floor

 8:50 -  9:00  Welcome and Opening Remarks
   Fred Roberts, DIMACS Director

 9:00 -  9:15  Opening Session
   Welcome: Lorrie Cranor, Carnegie Mellon University

 9:15 - 11:30  CHALLENGES, APPROACHES, AND MENTAL MODELS 

   Usable Security: Beyond the Interface
   Angela Sasse, University College London

   HCI Issues in Privacy
   Mark Ackerman, University of Michigan

   Security as Experience and Practice: Supporting Everyday Security
   Paul Dourish, UC Irvine

   Best Practices for Usable Security In Desktop Software
   Simson Garfinkel, MIT 

   Short Talk: A Flock of Birds, Safely Staged
   Scott Flinn, National Research Council of Canada

11:30 - 12:00  BREAK

12:00 - 12:45  Keynote:  Privacy and Security: Putting People First
   Elizabeth Mynatt, Georgia Institute of Technology

12:45 - 1:45   LUNCH

 1:45 - 2:30   Keynote: Human-Scale Security
   Matt Blaze, University of Pennsylvania

 2:30 - 3:00   BREAK

 3:00 - 5:30   AUTHENTICATION 

   Some Practical Guidance for Improved Password Usability
   Mike Just, Treasury Board of Canada

   Fingerprint authentication: The user experience
   Lynne Coventry, NCR

   Authentication for Humans
   Rachna Dhamija, UC Berkeley

   On user choice in graphical password schemes
   Fabian Monrose, Johns Hopkins University

   Short talk: Secure Web Authentication with Mobile Phones
   Min Wu, MIT

   Short talk: Toward Usable Security
   Dirk Balfanz, Palo Alto Research Center

5:30   Reception

6:15   Dinner

Thursday, July 8, 2004

 8:30 -  9:00  Breakfast and Registration
 
 9:00 - 10:30  PRIVACY, ANONYMITY, AND ENCRYPTION TOOLS (part I)

   Cryptography and Information Sharing in Civil Society
   Marc Levine, Benetech

   Anonymity loves company: Usability as a security parameter
   Roger Dingledine, The Free Haven Project

   Making Security Visible
   Alma Whitten, Google

   Short talk: Techniques for Visual Feedback of Security State
   Tara Whalen, Dalhousie University

10:30 - 11:00  BREAK

11:00 - 12:30  PRIVACY, ANONYMITY, AND ENCRYPTION TOOLS (part II)

   Privacy Analysis for the Casual User Through Bugnosis
   David Martin, University of Massachusetts Lowell

   Protecting privacy in software agents: Lessons from the PISA project
   Andrew Patrick, National Research Council, Canada

   Architectural issues in distributed, privacy-protecting 
   social networking
   Lenny Foner, MIT

   Short talk: Privacy in Instant Messaging
   Sameer Patil, University of California, Irvine


12:45 -  1:45  LUNCH

 1:45 -  3:15  UBIQUITOUS COMPUTING

   Knowing What You're Doing: A Design Goal for Usable Ubicomp Privacy
   Scott Lederer, UC Berkeley

   Privacy Challenges in Ubiquitous Computing
   Marc Langheinrich, ETH Zurich

   Semantic Web Technologies to Reconcile Privacy 

[Publicity-list]: DIMACS Workshop on Usable Privacy and Security Software

2004-03-31 Thread Linda Casals

*
 
DIMACS Workshop on Usable Privacy and Security Software
  
 July 7 - 8, 2004
 DIMACS Center, Rutgers University, Piscataway, NJ

Organizers: 

  Lorrie Cranor, Chair, Carnegie Mellon University, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  Mark Ackerman, University of Michigan, [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
  Fabian Monrose, Johns Hopkins University, [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
  Andrew Patrick, NRC Canada, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  Norman Sadeh, Carnegie Mellon University, [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Presented under the auspices of the Special Focus on Communication
Security and Information Privacy.



This workshop and working group is intended to bring together security
and privacy experts with human-computer interaction experts to discuss
approaches to developing more usable privacy and security
software. The workshop sessions on July 7 and July 8 will include
invited talks and discussion. July 9 will feature a working group of
invited participants who will spend the day identifying important
problems, discussing some of the research issues raised during the
workshop in more depth, and brainstorming about approaches to future
research, collaboration, and more user-centered design of security and
privacy software.

**

Participation:

 Participation in the workshop is open to anyone who registers (no
 submission necessary). Participation in the working group on July 9 is
 limited because of the emphasis on achieving a high degree of
 interactivity and discussion. Workshop participants who are interested
 in participating in the working group session should send a 1-page
 abstract or position paper describing their work relevant to this
 workshop to [EMAIL PROTECTED] Abstracts and position papers should be
 submitted in plain text, HTML, or PDF formats only. All submissions
 must be received by April 2, 2004 and authors will be notified by
 April 19, 2004 as to whether they have been accepted to participate in
 the working group. In addition, the authors of some submissions will
 be invited to present 10-minute short talks about their
 work. Submissions may describe ongoing or planned work related to the
 development of usable interfaces for security or privacy software, or
 they may discuss important research problems or propose a research
 agenda in this area. Submissions are especially encouraged that
 identify security and privacy areas in need of examination by HCI
 researchers, as well as areas where HCI researchers would like
 assistance from security and privacy researchers.

**
Registration Fees:

(Pre-registration deadline: June 30, 2004)

Please see website for registration fees and details.

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

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

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



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