- From: Lalana Kagal <lkagal@csail.mit.edu>
- Date: Tue, 10 Jan 2012 17:12:07 -0500
- To: Alexander Pretschner <alexander.pretschner@kit.edu>, Lalana Kagal <lkagal@csail.mit.edu>
apologies if you received this message more than once ... ========================================= CALL FOR PAPERS Data Usage Management on the Web Workshop at the World Wide Web Conference (WWW 2012), Lyon, France April 16th, 2012 http://dig.csail.mit.edu/2012/WWW-DUMW/ ========================================= The current abundance of digital data requires societal, legal, economical, and technical approaches to ensure appropriate use of this vast amount of data. Following two successful events - the Dagstuhl Seminar on Distributed Usage Control and the W3C Privacy and Data Usage Control Workshop, the goal of this workshop is to discuss current developments in usage management and to identify interesting areas of future research. Data usage control generalizes access control in order to address what happens to data in the future and after it has been shared or accessed. Spanning the domains of privacy, the protection of intellectual property and compliance, typical requirements include "delete after thirty days", "delete within five years", "notify whenever data is given away", and "don't share". However, in the near future, more general requirements may include "do not use for employment purposes", "do not use for tracking", as well as "do not use to harm me in any way". Major challenges in this field include policies, the relationship between end user actions and technical events, tracking data across layers of abstraction as well as logical and physical systems, policy enforcement, protection of the enforcement mechanisms, and guarantees. In the workshop, we will discuss the state of the art in different approaches including preventive (such as DRM systems) and forensic (such as accountability) approaches and discuss open problems. Besides this technical perspective, we want to provide a forum for discussions on the requirements (societal, individual, technical), the guarantees that can be provided in different contexts (e.g., inadvertent vs. malicious abuse of data) and business models for developing and deploying data usage management technology. The topics of interest include but are not limited to • social or economical approaches to usage control • provenance generation • provenance tracking • accountability • usage enforcement • usage policies • privacy • mis-use detection • different perspectives to usage management Submission: We solicit short position (upto 5 pages) and long technical (upto 8 pages) papers in ACM SIG Proceedings format on all dimensions of the above problem domain. All papers must be submitted via EasyChair at https://www.easychair.org/conferences/?conf=dumw2012 Important Dates: Papers Due: February 3rd, 2012 Author Notification: February 27th, 2012 Camera ready deadline: March 2nd, 2012 Workshop Date: April 16th, 2012 Program Committee: • Lujo Bauer, CMU, USA • David Chadwick, University of Kent, UK • Tim Finin, University of Maryland Baltimore County, USA • Renato Iannella, Semantic Identity, Australia • Anupam Joshi, University of Maryland Balitmore County, USA • Murat Kantarcioglu, University of Texas at Dallas, USA • Guenter Karjoth, IBM Research Zurich, Switzerland • Fabio Martinelli, IIT, Italy • Stephan Micklitz, Google, Germany • Karuna Pande Joshi, University of Maryland Balitmore County, USA • Jae Park, University of Texas at San Antonio, USA • Joe Pato, HP/MIT, USA • Thomas Roessler, W3C • Norman Sadeh, CMU, USA • Ravi Sandhu, University of Texas at San Antonio, USA • Andreas Schaad, SAP • Michael Waidner, Fraunhofer, Germany • Rigo Wenning, W3C • Marianne Winslett, University of Illinois Urbana- Champaign, USA Organizers: Lalana Kagal, MIT, USA Alexander Pretschner, KIT, Germany For more information: http://dig.csail.mit.edu/2012/WWW-DUMW/
Received on Tuesday, 10 January 2012 22:18:01 UTC