- From: Lalana Kagal <lkagal@csail.mit.edu>
- Date: Mon, 6 Jan 2014 09:35:44 -0500
- To: Alexander Pretschner <alexander.pretschner@in.tum.de>
5th International Workshop on Data Usage Management (DUMA 2014) An IEEE CS Security & Privacy Workshop (SPW 2014) San Francisco, CA, USA Saturday, May 17th, 2014 https://sites.google.com/site/ieeespduma14/home Data usage control generalizes access control to what happens to data in the future and after it has been given away or accessed. Spanning the domains of privacy, the protection of intellectual property and compliance, typical current requirements include "delete after thirty days," "don't delete within five years," "notify whenever data is given away," and "don't print." 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 and logical as well as physical systems, policy enforcement, protection of the enforcement mechanisms and guarantees. Following four successful events - the Dagstuhl Seminar on Distributed Usage Control, the W3C Privacy and Data Usage Control Workshop, the WWW 2012 Workshop on Data Usage Management on the Web, and the 4th International Workshop on Data Usage Management - the goal of this workshop is to continue the discussion around current technical developments in usage control and to foster collaboration in the area of representation, provenance tracking, misuse identification, and distributed usage enforcement. Topics of interest include but are not limited to: social (i.e. reputation systems) or economical (incentive based) approaches to usage control provenance generation provenance tracking accountability usage enforcement usage policies privacy mis-use detection different perspectives to usage management domain-specific solutions to usage control Submission: We solicit short position (upto 5 pages) and long technical (upto 8 pages) papers in IEEE Proceedings format (http://www.ieee.org/conferences_events/conferences/publishing/templates.html) on all dimensions of the above problem domain. Papers accepted by the workshop will be published by the IEEE Computer Society Press. Digital version of the proceedings will be made available to attendees. All papers must be submitted via EasyChair at https://www.easychair.org/conferences/?conf=duma2014 Important Dates: Papers due: January 31st, 2014 Author notification: March 7th, 2014 Camera ready and early registration deadline: TBD Workshop Date: May 17th, 2014 Program Committee: Rafael Accorsi, University of Freiburg, Germany David Chadwick, University of Kent, UK Renato Iannella, Semantic Identity, Australia Aaron Jaggard, Rutgers University, USA Guenter Karjoth, Hochschule Luzern, Switzerland Stefan Katzenbeisser, TU Darmstadt, Germany Fabio Martinelli, IIT-CNR, Italy Stephan Micklitz, Google, Germany Jaehong Park, UT San Antonio, USA Michael Carl Tschantz, UC Berkeley, USA... Organizers: Lalana Kagal, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, USA Alexander Pretschner, Technische Universität München, Germany
Received on Monday, 6 January 2014 14:37:24 UTC