- From: Samuel Weiler <weiler@w3.org>
- Date: Fri, 13 Jul 2018 15:13:13 -0400
- To: public-device-apis@w3.org, "public-web-security@w3.org" <public-web-security@w3.org>, public-privacy@w3.org
W3C is holding a workshop on Permissions and User Consent, September 18-19 in San Diego. The full CFP is at: https://www.w3.org/Privacy/permissions-ws-2018/cfp.html I encourage your participation. -- Sam Weiler, W3C -------- Forwarded Message -------- Subject: Call for Participation: W3C Workshop on Permissions and User Consent Resent-Date: Thu, 12 Jul 2018 08:03:03 +0000 Resent-From: w3c-ac-members@w3.org Date: Thu, 12 Jul 2018 10:02:51 +0200 From: Coralie Mercier <coralie@w3.org> To: w3c-ac-forum@w3.org CC: chairs@w3.org Dear Advisory Committee Representative, Chairs, W3C is pleased to call for participation in: W3C Workshop on Permissions and User Consent September 18-19 2018, San Diego, CA https://www.w3.org/Privacy/permissions-ws-2018/cfp.html Thanks to Qualcomm for hosting the workshop. This workshop brings together security and privacy experts, UI/UX researchers, browser vendors, mobile OS developers, API authors, Web publishers and users to address the privacy, security and usability challenges presented by the complex and overlapping variety of permissions and consent systems that are currently presented for hardware sensors, device capabilities and applications on the Web. The scope includes: * user consent; * bundling of permissions; * lifetime/duration of permissions; * permission inheritance to iframes and other embedded elements; * relation to same origin policy; * UIs and controls; * interaction with private browsing modes; * implicit permission grants; * progressive permission grants; * cross-stack permissions: how OS, browser, and web app permissions interact; * permission transparency; * relation to regulatory requirements; * special considerations for systems that use the browser as a pass-through (e.g. EME and Web Authentication); and * permissions/transparency/UI as it relates to display-less devices that connect to the Internet. We aim to share experiences and user studies, leading to common understanding of when and how to seek user consent for use of various Web platform capabilities. We expect this workshop to lead to concrete and consistent guidance for API authors and implementers and to identify areas for further standardization or research. An important take-away from this workshop should be guidance on how Permissions APIs should be designed, both now and in the future, considering the rapid evolution of the web platform. For more information on the workshop, please see details and submission instructions: https://www.w3.org/Privacy/permissions-ws-2018/cfp.html If you have any questions, please contact organizer Samuel Weiler <weiler@w3.org>. W3C Members interested in sponsoring this workshop should contact Alan Bird <abird@w3.org>. This announcement follows section 8 of the W3C Process Document: https://www.w3.org/2018/Process-20180201/#GAEvents We look forward to seeing you there. Coralie Mercier, Head of W3C Marketing & Communications -- Coralie Mercier - W3C Marketing & Communications - https://www.w3.org mailto:coralie@w3.org +337 810 795 22 https://www.w3.org/People/CMercier/
Received on Friday, 13 July 2018 19:13:18 UTC