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Workshop: Security and Privacy in Future Business Services


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Call for Papers for the Workshop "Security and Privacy in Future Business Services"


Paper submission deadline has been extended to:
New Submission Deadline February 28, 2006


International Conference on Emerging Trends in Information and Communication Security (ETRICS’06)
June 6-9, 2006, Freiburg, Germany

http://www.etrics.org/workshops


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Individualization of business services is one of the most promising business development prospects for future markets. Customized products and services, individual price differentiation, personalized promotions, and location/time-sensitive addressing of customers are raising marketers’ attention. Particularly ubiquitous computing technologies, with their mobile and wireless interfaces, are laying the grounds for these developments: information about purchase behavior and location, proximity, presence, after-sales usage patterns, and even personal emotional states will potentially be combined and analyzed.

Technical progress, however, not only improves the available data pool but also results in new challenges for security and privacy. Handling the trade-off between high-quality individualized services and maintaining privacy and security seems to be a key factor for business success. Without suitable mechanisms for enforcing the correct handling of data collection and processing, new service ideas may not receive marketplace acceptance.

This workshop therefore focuses on technical and economic mechanisms addressing the trade-off between privacy and individualization. It aims to bring together privacy experts on an international level to discuss recent advances in trust-promoting mechanisms. To this end, the workshop seeks submissions from academia and industry presenting novel research on theoretical and practical aspects of security and privacy technologies as well as economic models that may enforce a correct handling of sensitive data. Theoretical work, prototypes and experimental studies are equally welcome.

Selected contributions will be invited to submit a full paper to a special issue of the Wirtschaftsinformatik journal.

Topics of interest include but are not limited to:
  • Valuation of personal data/private information
  • Private data markets and market mechanisms
  • Trust management from a business process perspective
  • Trust management from a technical perspective
  • Political dimensions of privacy and security
  • Drivers of technology acceptance: what is the role of privacy and security in a Technology Acceptance Model?
  • Empirical studies on privacy and/or security perception and behavior
  • Technical mechanisms to promote trust, privacy and security, especially
    • Reputation mechanisms
    • Architectures and models for identity management
    • Pseudonymity management
    • Anonymity
    • Authentication
  • Privacy and security for RFID and location-based technologies
  • Privacy-enhancing technologies for enterprises

Important Dates:
  • February 28, 2006: Submission of position paper (send 2 pages to sackmann@iig.uni-freiburg.de)
  • March 10, 2006: Notification of acceptance for the workshop
  • March 10, 2006: Invitation to submit a full paper to the journal Wirtschaftsinformatik

Workshop Chairs:
  • Stefan Sackmann, University of Freiburg, Germany
  • Sarah Spiekermann, University of Berlin, Germany

Program Committee:
  • Alessandro Acquisti, Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, USA
  • Jens Grossklags, UC Berkeley, USA
  • Marit Hansen, Independent Centre for Privacy Protection Schleswig-Holstein, Germany
  • Marc Langheinrich, ETH Zurich, Switzerland
  • Ursula Sury, Hochschulen für Wirtschaft und Technik und Architektur Luzern, Switzerland

Programm



Part 1: Importance of Privacy for Individuals, Society and Economy

Ursula Sury

Rechtsanwältin in Luzern und Zug, Prof. an der Hochschule für Wirtschaft, Technik und Architektur in Luzern

Privacy: Ausgewählte Aspekte von Rechtsverletzungen durch Computing

Alessandro Acquisti

Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh

Is There a Cost to Privacy Breaches? - An Event Study

Alfred Kobsa

University of California, Humboldt University, Berlin

Convincing Users to Disclose Personal Data

Sarah Spiekermann

University of Berlin

Privacy in the Germans' Mind

Part 2: Technical Approaches for Protecting Privacy

Sebastian Gajek

University of Bochum

A Case Study on Online-Banking Security

Marit Hansen

Independent Centre for Privacy Protection Schleswig-Holstein

Using Legally Compliant Reputation Systems to Filter SPIT (Spam over Internet Telephony)

Matthew Smith

University of Marburg

Future Internet Security Services Enabled by Sharing of Anonymized Logs

Stefan Sackmann

University of Freiburg

Privacy Evidence for Protecting Customer's Privacy in Ubiquitous Computing

Sören Preibusch

DIW Berlin

Designing Incentive-Compatible Privacy Negotiations

Boursas Latifa

Munich University of Technology

Integration and Propagation of Trust in Federated Identity Management Scenarios

 
In cooperation with: IEEE ACM SIGSAC GI DFG
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