Fwd: 2019 USENIX Conference on Privacy Engineering Practice and Respect (PEPR '19) – Call for Participation

Dear colleagues,

I’d like to make you aware of a new conference that aims to bring privacy engineering researchers and practitioners together and thought this might be of interest to many of you given the discussions at the W3C workshop. It would be great to receive talk submissions from you.

If possible please also distribute the call for participation to others interested in privacy engineering.

Thank you!
Florian


> Begin forwarded message:
> 
> From: Florian Schaub <fschaub@umich.edu>
> Subject: 2019 USENIX Conference on Privacy Engineering Practice and Respect (PEPR '19) – Call for Participation
> Date: April 3, 2019 at 09:40:41 EDT
> To: PET@lists.links.org
> 
> PEPR '19 Call for Participation
> https://www.usenix.org/conference/pepr19/call-for-participation <https://www.usenix.org/conference/pepr19/call-for-participation>
> 
> The 2019 USENIX Conference on Privacy Engineering Practice and Respect (PEPR '19) will be held Monday, August 12 and the morning of Tuesday, August 13 in Santa Clara, CA, USA, and will be co-located with the 28th USENIX Security Symposium and the Fifteenth Symposium on Usable Privacy and Security (SOUPS 2019). Attendees will be co-registered for SOUPS and especially invited to attend SOUPS on the afternoon of Tuesday, August 13.
> 
> Important Dates
> Submissions due: Wednesday, May 1, 2019
> Speaker notification: Saturday, June 15, 2019
> 
> Conference Organizers
> Program Co-Chairs
> Lorrie Cranor, Carnegie Mellon University
> Lea Kissner, Humu
> 
> Steering Committee
> Travis Breaux, Carnegie Mellon University
> Lorrie Cranor, Carnegie Mellon University
> Debra J. Farber, BigID
> Casey Henderson, USENIX Association
> Lea Kissner, Humu
> Naomi Lefkovitz, NIST
> Florian Schaub, University of Michigan
> Lawrence You, Google
> 
> Overview
> The 2019 USENIX Conference on Privacy Engineering Practice and Respect (PEPR '19) is a single-track conference focused on designing and building products and systems with privacy and respect for their users and the societies in which they operate. Our goal is to improve the state of the art and practice of building for privacy and respect and to foster a deeply knowledgeable community of both privacy practitioners and researchers who collaborate towards that goal.
> 
> We view diversity as a key enabler of this goal: effectively building for privacy and respect is a challenge in and of itself; attempting this without a range of perspectives is harder still. Thus, we encourage and welcome participation from all employment sectors, racial and ethnic backgrounds, nationalities, genders, disability statuses, ages, and all those other differences which make us richer as humanity.
> 
> PEPR '19 is committed to fostering a respectful and collaborative environment.
> 
> Call for Participation
> In its inaugural year, PEPR '19 is soliciting proposals for 20–30 minute original talks, followed by Q&A. Next year, we expect to solicit proposals for both talks and papers. 
> 
> The conference founders and steering committee will select talks which best illuminate topics in the fields of practical privacy engineering and building systems that respect their users. We can't build respectful systems without understanding how. PEPR is tilted towards constructive solutions but also includes the illumination of challenges. We're interested in talks from both practitioners and researchers about design proposals, research, deployed systems, case studies, and experience reports.
> 
> We are particularly interested in talks addressing the following themes:
> Focused on building. Usability, crypto, and anonymization are all important, but they're only a small slice of what is needed to build for privacy and respect. PEPR is designed to take a comprehensive view, including topics like architecting large-scale systems for reliable and measurable data deletion, end-to-end consent (from the user all the way to infrastructure), data access and handling (how do you grant it, how do you understand it, how do you enforce it, how do you build a system so you can debug without granting too much, etc.), how to do a privacy review (design and code), privacy red-teaming, incidents, root cause analysis and coming full-circle, how to run an engineering-focused privacy program, and many, many, many more.
> Focused on practice. PEPR focuses on building for privacy and respect in real-world systems. Everything technical is messier when it hits the real world, but privacy is messier than most because: 1) there are a lot of humans involved and 2) there are more regulatory and legal requirements than in many other technical fields.
> 
> New talks on previously published materials are also welcome.
> 
> Submission Guidelines
> Please submit talk proposals via the submission form: https://pepr19.usenix.hotcrp.com/ <https://pepr19.usenix.hotcrp.com/>
> 
> 
> 
> 

Florian Schaub
Assistant Professor
School of Information
University of Michigan

Received on Thursday, 4 April 2019 15:46:34 UTC