- From: Philipp Kärger <kaerger@L3S.de>
- Date: Thu, 04 Mar 2010 09:20:54 +0100
- To: undisclosed-recipients:;
(Please accept our apologies for cross posting) ======================================================================= *LAST* CALL FOR PAPERS and *DEADLINE EXTENDED* to March 14, 2010 SPOT2010 Second International Workshop on Trust and Privacy on the Social and Semantic Web http://spot.semanticweb.org/2010/ Co-located with ESWC2010 (the 7th European / Extended Semantic Web Conference) The Semantic Web is becoming reality as it is an integrated component of the Web we are browsing everyday - be it the Open Linked Data movement that nowadays exposes over 10 billion triples of RDF or the annotated and structured information available on Web pages used by major search engines, such as Yahoo! SearchMonkey and Google. Moreover, social data about people and their interaction is made available in machine-understandable format in projects like FOAF or SIOC. Facing this amount of data, privacy and trust consideration is an important step to take right now. The challenging research questions arising from this movement include: * How do people know that the data gathered from several sources for reasoning purposes can be trusted? * How can one avoid that personal data exposed on the Semantic Web will be combined with other available semantic data in a way that sensitive information may be revealed? * How shall a safe reasoning process look like that does not end up in a conflict only because a single Semantic Web peer exposed a contradiction? We expect discussions and results concerning questions like these at SPOT2010 leading to solutions and research results in the realm of Semantic Web and social data for the pervasive issue of privacy and trust on the Web. TOPICS OF INTEREST ================================ The list of topics that aims to be covered by the workshop include, but is not limited to: Semantic Technologies for Trust and Privacy on the Web * Privacy by generalization of answers * Ontologies for trust and privacy * Semantic Web policies * Usage control and accountability * Policy representation and reasoning * Semantic Web technologies for access control Trusted Knowledge Representation and Reasoning on the Semantic Web * Data provenance and trustworthiness of knowledge sources * Trust-enabled linked data * Ontology hijacking * Scalability of trust and privacy on the Semantic Web Trust and Privacy for Social 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 * Social Network annoyance, social software fatigue, social spam * Managing information overload on the Social Web with privacy metrics * Trust and privacy for social software on mobile devices SUBMISSIONS ================================ Papers will have to be formatted using the Springer Publications format for Lecture Notes in Computer Science (LNCS). Submissions for the Research Papers and Demos and Applications will be made using the EasyChair Conference System, and proceedings of the papers will be provided through the CEUR online service. The following types of contributions are welcome: * Research Papers: short (up to 6 pages) and full (up to 12 pages) technical papers that aims to explore how Semantic Web technologies can provide solutions to trust and privacy issues on the Web, focusing on one or more topics from the various ones identified within the main CFP. Especially, we very welcome 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; * Demos and Applications: participants have to submit a two-page paper containing a demo description together with a URI where the demo is available on-line and meeting the following conditions: (1) It must use Semantic Web technologies (such as RDF, SPARQL, FOAF, SIOC, etc.); (2) It must deal with person or person-related semantic data (such as profiles, buddylists, reviews, comments, etc.) and (3) additionally, the demo may operate on a real social platform, such as MySpace, Facebook, netvibes or iGoogle. Papsers shall be submitted in PDF format to http://www.easychair.org/conferences/?conf=spot2010 IMPORTANT DATES ================================ Submission deadline: extended to March 14, 2010 (23:59 pm Hawaii time,GMT-10) Acceptance notification: April 5, 2010 Camera-ready submission: April 18, 2010 Workshop: May 30 or May 31, 2010 WORKSHOP ORGANIZATION ================================ The workshop will be co-located with the ESWC in Heraklion (Greece), and will be held on the 30th or 31st of May 2010. The workshop will consist of: Keynote: To be announced. Research Track: Full papers will be presented at the workshop in a 25 minutes session including a discussion. We may add small panel sessions at the end of each research session where the presenters are the panelists in order to foster discussion and comparisons about the papers presented. Demo and Application Track: In order to stimulate discussions including practitioners and highlight future directions we plan to include a Demo and Application track. In contrast to the research track, there will be different rules for submissions: participants have to submit a two-page paper containing a demo description together with a URI where the demo is available on-line and meeting the following conditions Lightning Talks Track: We will provide a way for people to present feed- back on research track talks, as well as controversial topics potentially fostering discussions after the workshop. We envision short talks (three minutes maximum). WORKSHOP CHAIRS ================================ Philipp Kaerger, L3S Research Center, Germany (http://www.L3S.de/~kaerger) Daniel Olmedilla, Telefonica R&D, Spain (http://www.olmedilla.info) Alexandre Passant, DERI, NUI Galway, Ireland (http://apassant.net) Axel Polleres, DERI, NUI Galway, Ireland (http://polleres.net) For any enquiries about the workshop, please contact us at spot2010 [at] easychair [dot] org. PROGRAM COMMITTEE ================================ Chris Bizer, Freie Universitaet Berlin, Germany John Breslin, DERI, NUI Galway, Ireland Dan Brickley, FOAF Project, World Juri Luca De Coi, L3S Research Center, Germany Stefan Decker, DERI, NUI Galway, Ireland Fabien Gandon, INRIA Sophia-Antipolis, France Harry Halpin, University of Edinburgh, UK Olaf Hartig, Humboldt-Universitaet zu Berlin, Germany Michael Hausenblas, DERI, NUI Galway, Ireland Philipp Kaerger, L3S Research Center, Germany Lalana Kagal, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, USA Javier Lopez, University of Malaga, Spain Fabio Martinelli, National Research Council - C.N.R., Italy Daniel Olmedilla, Telefonica R&D, Spain Sascha Ossowski, Universidad Rey Juan Carlos, Spain Alexandre Passant, DERI, NUI Galway, Ireland Axel Polleres, DERI, NUI Galway, Ireland Simon Schenk, University of Koblenz-Landau Daniel Schwabe, Pontificia Universidade Catolica do Rio de Janeiro, Brazil Jean-Marc Seigneur, University of Geneva, Switzerland Carles Sierra, IIIA CSIC, Spain Milan Stankovic, LaLIC, Universite Paris IV Sorbonne, France Henry Story, Sun Microsystems, France Alessandra Toninelli, Universita di Bologna, Italy Claudia Wagner, Joanneum Research, Austria SPONSORS ================================ The SPOT2010 Workshop is supported by the EU funded COST Action IC0801 - Agreement Technologies (AT) and by the Science Foundation Ireland under grant number SFI/08/CE/I1380 (Lion 2).
Received on Thursday, 4 March 2010 08:24:50 UTC