- From: Luis-Daniel Ibáñez <L.D.Ibanez@soton.ac.uk>
- Date: Tue, 21 Jan 2020 13:31:53 +0000
- To: "semantic-web@w3.org" <semantic-web@w3.org>
### Call for Papers ### Deadline Extended: 27th January 2020 (23:59 AoE) Workshop on A Decentralised Web In conjunction with The Web Conference 2020 April 20th or 21st 2020, Taipei, Taiwan Website: https://adecentweb.org/a-decentralised-web-workshop-2020/ Submission Link: https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=decentweb19 ### About the Workshop ### The Web is increasingly becoming a centralised story: we rely on large-scale server-side infrastructures to perform intense reasoning, data mining, and query execution, and we are expected to trust the outputs. This kind of centralisation leads to a number of problems, including lock-in effects, lack of user control of their data, limited incentives for interoperability and openness, and the resulting detrimental effects on privacy and innovation. Therefore, we urgently need research and engineering to decentralise the Web once more, aiming for intelligent clients—instead of intelligent servers. ### Topics of Interest ### We consider two major themes around decentralisation: technical and human. On the technical side, topics include but not limited to: * Neutral and balanced Web architectures * Decentralised data management * Decentralised query processing and indexing * Multi-agent and collaborative systems on top of Web technologies * Collective Intelligence, including peer production, collaborative, and edge computation * Privacy and anonymity versus security and transparency * “Well behaved” systems: technical aspects of trust, policies, governance, compliance, accountability and transparency * Consensus algorithms and Blockchains * Web and Internet of things On the human side, topics include but not limited to: * Computational Social Science: network effect, post-truth, filter bubbles, echo chambers, nudging * User experience of decentralisation: control, understanding, explanation * Developer experience of decentralisation: languages, standards, software development tools * Human and social aspects of privacy and anonymity, and its relationship with security and transparency * “Well behaved” systems: human and social aspects of trust, policies, governance, compliance, accountability and transparency * Economics and business models of decentralised systems * Decentralisation as a mean for inclusion ### Organisers ### Ruben Verborgh - IDLab - Ghent University Allan Third - KMI - Open University Sabrina Kirrane - Vienna University of Economics and Business Luis-Daniel Ibáñez - University of Southampton For more info: https://adecentweb.org/a-decentralised-web-workshop-2020/ -- Dr. Luis-Daniel Ibáñez Research Fellow Web and Internet Science Group University of Southampton
Received on Tuesday, 21 January 2020 13:32:00 UTC