[apologies if you received duplicate copies of this call for participation]
CALL FOR PARTICIPATION: The 5th Workshop on Hot Topics in Privacy Enhancing Technologies (HotPETs 2012) July 13, 2012, Vigo, Spain http://petsymposium.org/2012/hotpets.php Held within the 12th Privacy Enhancing Technologies Symposium (PETS 2012), July 11-13, 2012. Registration for PETS 2012 is open at http://petsymposium.org/2012/registration.php Early-bird registration ends on June 15th. HotPETs 2012: As the amount and sensitivity of personal information disseminated on the Web increase, so do related privacy concerns. The ambition of the Workshop on Hot Topics in Privacy Enhancing Technologies (HotPETs) is to foster new ideas, spirited debates, as well as controversial perspectives on privacy (and lack thereof). Held in conjunction with the PET Symposium, HotPETs is an established, vibrant forum providing researchers with a unique chance to receive feedback from privacy specialists. The nature of HotPETs' discussion-oriented format is especially suited to promising preliminary results, interdisciplinary research, as well as hands-on experimentation with privacy-enhancing technologies. However, submissions of full-blown work seeking dissemination and feedback from the community are also encouraged. Workshop co-chairs: Emiliano De Cristofaro (PARC), Julien Freudiger (EPFL) More information can be found at: http://petsymposium.org/2012/hotpets.php KEYNOTE SPEAKER: This year's keynote talk will be given by Dr. Moez Chakchouk. Dr. Moez Chakchouk is the Chairman and CEO of the Tunisian Internet Agency (ATI). He was appointed a few weeks after the Tunisian revolution and decided that ATI should no longer function as a censorship machine. Dr. Chakchouk received his M.S. in Telecommunications from the ENIT Engineering School in 2001 and his Ph.D. in Telecommunications applied to Mathematics in 2009, from El Manar University (Tunisia) and Paris Descartes University (France). Prior to ATI, Dr. Chakchouk has worked at The National Center for Telecommunication Studies and Research (CERT) and the Telecommunications Regulation Authority (INT). In 2010, he was appointed as Adviser to the Minister of Communications Technology. ACCEPTED PAPERS: 1. Foteini Baldimtsi, Gesine Hinterwalder, Andy Rupp, Anna Lysyanskaya, Christof Paar and Wayne P. Burleson. Pay As You Go 2. Greg Norcie, Kelly Caine and Jean Camp. Eliminating Stop-Points in the Installation and Use of Anonymity Systems: A Usability Evaluation of the Tor Browser Bundle 3. Indrajeet Singh, Michael Butkiewicz, Harsha Madhyastha, Srikanth Krishnamurthy and Sateesh Addepalli. Building a Wrapper for Fine-Grained Private Group Messaging on Twitter 4. Kurt Partridge, Manas A. Pathak, Ersin Uzun and Cong Wang. PiCoDa: Privacy-preserving Smart Coupon Delivery Architecture 5. Luca Invernizzi, Christopher Kruegel and Giovanni Vigna. Message In A Bottle: Sailing Past Censorship 6. Lukasz Olejnik, Claude Castelluccia and Artur Janc. Why Johnny Can't Hide: On the Uniqueness of Web Browsing History Patterns 7. Michael Brennan. Perspectives on Academic Impact from Inside the Federal Trade Commission. 8. Mishari Almishari and Gene Tsudik. Exploring Linkablility of User Reviews 9. Nevena Vratonjic, Vincent Bindschaedler, Kevin Huguenin and Jean-Pierre Hubaux. How Others Compromise Your Location Privacy: The Case of Shared Public IPs at Hotspots _______________________________________________ IEEE Communications Society Tech. Committee on Computer Communications (TCCC) - for discussions on computer networking and communication. [email protected] https://lists.cs.columbia.edu/cucslists/listinfo/tccc
