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PriMo 2011 : PriMo : First International Workshop on Privacy Management in Mobile Applications | |||||||||||||||
Link: http://www.open.ac.uk/blogs/PriMo2011/ | |||||||||||||||
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Call For Papers | |||||||||||||||
CALL FOR PARTICIPATION
PriMo 2011: First International Workshop on Privacy Management in Mobile Application (27th of June 2011, Copenhagen - in conjunction with IFIPTM 2011) Providing appropriate solutions to the privacy issues raised by mobile and ubiquitous technology is increasingly important, but mobile privacy remains difficult to study and address, partly because privacy is a socially sensitive and context-dependent problem, partly because mobility introduces continuous contextual shifts, interactional constraints and monitoring obstacles. Different research methods may yield contradictory findings, design solutions may not account for critical socio-cultural factors or afford adequate usability, and management policies may not have the flexibility that mobile users require. This workshop is organised with the support of the PRiMMA Project and aims to promote an open exchange between researchers investigating privacy management issues in mobile applications. It will provide an exciting opportunity for researchers to discuss and evaluate research approaches and achievements within the field. In particular, we invite authors to submit extended abstracts addressing one or more of the following key areas: • Privacy research methods for mobile systems • Design solutions to address user privacy in mobile systems • Policy-based privacy management Topics may include but are not restricted to: o Empirical studies of mobile privacy users and systems o Methods and techniques for eliciting and analysing mobile privacy requirements o User evaluation of privacy-enabled mobile interactive technologies o Machine learning approaches to mobile privacy management o Usability issues in the design of privacy-enabled mobile systems o Privacy policies for mobile applications o Online presence and privacy management o Privacy aware adaptive systems o Mobile privacy and social relations Abstracts will be peer-reviewed by the workshop Programme Committee. Accepted abstracts will be presented at the workshop and then published both on the PRiMMA website and conference’s workshop proceedings. Additionally, a full version of selected abstracts will be invited for inclusion in an edited book. Submission Information: ------------------- Submissions to the workshop must be in LNCS format and must not exceed 4 pages. The submission should be sent to primo.workshop.2011@gmail.com Important Dates: -------------- Abstract Submission: 30th April 2011 Author Notification: 20th May 2011 Camera ready copy due: 30th May 2011 Workshop date: 27th June 2011 Organisers: --------- Clara Mancini, The Open University, UK Ryan Wishart, Imperial College London, UK Programme Committee: ------------------- Arosha Bandara, The Open University, United Kingdom Elisa Bertino, Purdue University, United States Ann Blandford, University College London, United Kingdom Ian Brown, Oxford University, United Kingdom Seraphin Calo, IBM, United States Marco Casassa Mont, HP Labs, United Kingdom Paul Dourish, California University Irvine, United States Naranker Dulay, Imperial College London, United Kingdom David Evans, Cambridge University, United Kingdom Tristan Henderson, St Andrews University, United Kingdom Adam Joinson, Bath University, United Kingdom Marc Langheinrich, Lugano University, Switzerland Jorge Lobo, IBM, United States Emil Lupu, Imperial College London, United Kingdom Clara Mancini, The Open University, United Kingdom Nancy Mead, Carnegie Mellon University, United States Bashar Nuseibeh, Limerick University, Ireland Kieron O'Hara, Southampton University, United Kingdom Inah Omoronyia, Limerick University, Ireland Blaine Price, The Open University, United Kingdom Kai Rannenberg, Goethe University, Germany Yvonne Rogers, The Open University, United Kingdom Alessandra Russo, Imperial College London, United Kingdom Angela Sasse, University College London, United Kingdom Morris Sloman, Imperial College London, United Kingdom Roel Wieringa, Twente University, Netherlands Ryan Wishart, Imperial College London, United Kingdom Nobukazu Yoshioka, National Institute of Informatics, Japan |
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