- From: Alessandra Toninelli <alessandra.toninelli@unibo.it>
- Date: Tue, 13 Jan 2009 12:26:05 +0100
- To: elsnet-list@elsnet.org,end2end-interest@postel.org, ifip_nm@bbcr.uwaterloo.ca,ifip-tc6@informatik.rwth-aachen.de, irlist-editor@acm.org,iscc@mail.ing.unibo.it,kweb-all@lists.deri.at, mobicom@listserv.acm.org,policy-sig@doc.ic.ac.uk, publications@agentlink.org,public-pling@w3.org, researchers@mailman.ufsc.br,seweb-list@lists.deri.at, w3c-policy@apps.ietf.org,www-mobile@w3c.org
- Cc: kaerger@L3S.de
[Please accept our apologies if you received multiple copies of this call for paper] ============================================================ CALL FOR PAPERS ============================================================= 1st International Workshop on Trust and Privacy on the Social and Semantic Web (SPOT 2009) http://spot2009.semanticweb.org in conjunction with The 6th European Semantic Web Conference (ESWC2009) Heraklion, Greece Mai 31st or June 1st, 2009 Workshop goals ------------------------- Semantic Web technologies have reached a status where they influence our daily lives. On the one hand, applications for sharing semantically annotated pictures, blogs, and videos and semantic-enhanced social networking platforms are present. On the other hand, the so-called Web of Data with its thousands of billions of triples is leaving its research prototype status. Applications using Semantic Web technologies start to arise and to be used by a large number of users. However, although trust and privacy play a crucial role in its final development and adoption, in most of the running systems and research prototypes no or not sufficient solutions to address these topics are considered. The Semantic Web as well as the Social Web has reached a state where those issues have to be addressed seriously in order to become reality. As the Semantic Web goes mainstream, especially through its Social aspect, it is time for the community to gather around that topic. SPOT09 will be held at the European Semantic Web Conference 2009.It will bring together, among others, researchers and developers from the field of Semantic Web, the Social Web, and trust and privacy enforcement. It provides the opportunity to discuss and analyze important requirements and open research issues for a trustful Semantic Web. We welcome both, theoretical and application oriented results, concerning how trust can be ensured in an open system like the Social Semantic Web as well as how Semantic Web technologies can be used or have to be extended in order to serve for privacy issues. We also plan to include a specific time slot for case studies and system demonstrations. Workshop topics ------------------------- Workshop topics include, but are not limited to: 1. Trust and Privacy on the Semantic Web: * Ontologies for trust and privacy * Data provenance and trustworthiness of knowledge sources * Semantic web policies * Privacy by generalization of answers * Usage control and accountability * Trust-enabled linked data * Policy representation and reasoning 2. Trust and Privacy for Social Semantic Web Applications: * Trust and privacy in social online communities (e.g., SIOC) * Privacy in Semantic Web sharing applications (e.g.,semantic desktop) * User profiling and modeling vs. privacy * Privacy and community mining * Trust and reputation metrics * Usage mining and policy extraction * Privacy awareness in social communities * The Semantic Web as a trust enabler 3. Applications and Case Studies: * Social Semantic Web case studies, prototypes, and experiences * Trust and privacy on social semantic platforms * Social network annoyance, social software fatigue, social spam * Managing information overload in the Social Web with privacy metrics * Trust and privacy for social software on mobile devices * Scalability of trust and privacy on the Semantic Web Workshop organization ------------------------- The workshop will consist of presentations of Research Papers by their authors, a Demos and Application session, as well as a Lightning Talk session in which we encourage late-breaking, provocative discussions and presentations. An invited speaker will also give an opening keynote in the morning. The event will be followed by a social event in order to foster discussions and collaboration between workshop attendees. Submission guidelines: -------------------------- We expect different kind of submissions * Research Papers: - Full technical papers, up to 12 pages - Short technical papers, up to 6 pages * Demos and Applications: - 2 pages + demo * Lightning Talks: - 1 slide and 3 min Papers will have to be formatted using the Springer Publications format for Lecture Notes in Computer Science (LNCS). Submissions for papers and demo descriptions will be made using the EasyChair Conference System, and proceedings of the papers will be published with CEUR-WS. We very welcome research papers focusing on theoretical work as well as applications regarding the benefits of Semantic Web technologies to solve these issues. The papers should clearly define the motivation of the work with relevant scenarios and should also provide a clear overview and evaluation of the benefits of the proposed approaches. Lightnight Talks submissions will be open a week before the workshop and people will be allowed to register until the first break of the afternoon. For submission details, please refer to the workshop website. Important Dates ---------------------------- Submission date: 7 March 2009 Notification date: 4 April 2009 Camera ready: 18 April 2009 Organizing committee ---------------------------- Michael Hausenblas, DERI Galway, Ireland Philipp Kaerger, L3S Research Center, Germany Daniel Olmedilla, Telefonica R&D, Madrid, Spain Alexandre Passant, DERI Galway, Ireland Axel Polleres, DERI Galway, Ireland Program committee ---------------------------- Vinicius Almendra - ADDLabs, Brasil Chris Bizer - Freie Universitaet Berlin, Germany Piero Bonatti - University of Naples, Italy John Breslin - National University of Ireland, Galway Dan Brickley - FOAF project, UK Juri L. De Coi - L3S Research Center, Germany Stefan Decker - DERI Galway, Ireland Fabien Gandon - INRIA, France Wolfgang Halb - Joanneum Research, Austria Harry Halpin - University of Edinburgh, UK Tom Heath - Talis, UK James Hendler - University of Maryland, USA Michael Hausenblas - DERI, Ireland Bettina Hoser - Universitaet Karlsruhe, Germany Philipp Kaerger - L3S Research Center, Germany Lalana Kagal - MIT, USA Daniel Olmedilla - Telefonica R&D, Spain Sascha Ossowski - University Rey Juan Carlos, Spain Alexandre Passant - DERI, Ireland Axel Polleres - DERI, Ireland Simon Schenk - University of Koblenz, Germany Carles Sierra - IIIA CSIC, Spain Henry Story - Sun Microsystems, France Alessandra Toninelli - Universita di Bologna, Italy
Received on Tuesday, 13 January 2009 11:28:09 UTC