Call for Papers
10th Privacy Enhancing Technologies SymposiumBerlin, Germany
Jul 21 – Jul 23, 2010
Important Dates:
- PETS submission deadline: February 15, 2010, 11:59 pm UTC (7 pm EST)
- PETS author notification: April 10, 2010
- PETS camera-ready deadline for proceedings: May 5, 2010, 11:59pm UTC (8 pm EDT)
- HotPETs submission deadline: April 24, 2010, 11:59 UTC (8 pm EDT)
- HotPETs notification: May 8, 2010
- HotPETs camera-ready deadline: May 29, 2010, 11:59 UTC (8 pm EDT)
All deadlines are FIRM – no extensions.
Privacy and anonymity are increasingly important in the online world. Corporations, governments, and other organizations are realizing and exploiting their power to track users and their behavior. Approaches to protecting individuals, groups, but also companies and governments from profiling and censorship include decentralization, encryption, distributed trust, and automated policy disclosure.
The 10th Privacy Enhancing Technologies Symposium addresses the design and realization of such privacy services for the Internet and other data systems and communication networks by bringing together anonymity and privacy experts from around the world to discuss recent advances and new perspectives.
The symposium seeks submissions from academia and industry presenting novel research on all theoretical and practical aspects of privacy technologies, as well as experimental studies of fielded systems. We encourage submissions from other communities such as law and business that present their perspectives on technological issues. As in the past, proceedings will be published in the Springer Lecture Notes in Computer Science series. Like last year, the symposium proceedings will be available at the event, rather than after it.
Suggested topics include but are not restricted to:
- Anonymous communications and publishing systems
- Attacks on privacy and privacy technologies
- Censorship resistance
- Data protection technologies
- Deployment models for privacy infrastructures
- Economics of privacy
- Fielded systems and techniques for enhancing privacy in existing systems
- Location privacy
- Policy, law, and human rights relating to privacy
- Privacy and anonymity in peer-to-peer architectures
- Privacy and inference control in databases
- Privacy-enhanced access control or authentication/certification
- Privacy-friendly payment mechanisms for PETS and other services
- Privacy in Ubiquitous Computing Environments
- Privacy threat models
- Privacy vulnerabilities and their impact on phishing and identity theft
- Profiling and data mining
- Pseudonyms, identity management, linkability, and reputation
- Reliability, robustness and abuse prevention in privacy systems
- Traffic analysis
- Usability issues and user interfaces for PETs
- General Chair:
- Hannes Federrath, Universitaet Regensburg
- Program Chairs:
- Mikhail Atallah, Purdue University
- Nick Hopper, University of Minnesota
- Program Committee:
- Alessandro Acquisti, Carnegie Mellon University
- Kevin Bauer, University of Colorado
- Alastair Beresford, University of Cambridge
- Nikita Borisov, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
- Sabrina De Capitani di Vimercati, University of Milan
- Claudia Diaz, K.U.Leuven
- Cynthia Dwork, Microsoft
- Simone Fischer-Huebner, Karlstad University
- Rachel Greenstadt, Drexel University
- Thomas Heydt-Benjamin, ETH Zurich
- Aaron Johnson, University of Texas at Austin
- Apu Kapadia, Indiana University
- Bradley Malin, Vanderbilt University
- Tal Malkin, Columbia University
- Nick Mathewson, The Tor Project
- Aleecia McDonald, Carnegie Mellon University
- Shishir Nagaraja, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
- Benny Pinkas, University of Haifa
- Andreas Pfitzmann, Dresden University of Technology
- Rob Reeder, Microsoft
- Len Sassaman, K.U.Leuven
- Andrei Serjantov, The Free Haven Project
- Paul Syverson, Naval Research Laboratory
- Carmela Troncoso, K.U.Leuven
- Ting Yu, North Carolina State University
- HotPETs chairs:
- Carmela Troncoso, K.U.Leuven
- Andrei Serjantov, The Free Haven Project
Papers to be submitted to the PET Symposium must be at most 15 pages excluding the bibliography and well-marked appendices, and at most 20 pages total. Submission of shorter papers is strongly encouraged whenever appropriate. Papers must conform to the Springer LNCS style (in which the text area per page is a little smaller than 5" x 7 3/4"). Follow the "Information for Authors" link at http://www.springer.de/comp/lncs/authors.html. Papers not following these instructions risk being rejected without consideration of their merits.
Submitted papers must not substantially overlap with papers that have been published or that are simultaneously submitted to a journal or a conference with proceedings.
Reviewers of submitted papers are not required to read the appendices and the paper should be intelligible without them. The paper should start with the title and an abstract. The introduction should give some background and summarize the contributions of the paper at a level appropriate for a non-specialist reader. Submitted papers must not be anonymized. Proceedings will be published by Springer and made available at the symposium.
By submitting a paper, you agree that if it is accepted, you will sign a paper distribution agreement allowing for publication, and also that an author of the paper will register for the symposium and present the paper there. Our current working agreement with Springer is that authors will retain copyright on their own works while assigning an exclusive 3-year distribution license to Springer. Authors may still post their papers on their own Web sites. See http://petsymposium.org/2009/2009-springer-form.pdf for the 2009 version of this agreement.
Paper submissions must be received by February 15, 2010, 11:59 UTC (7 pm EST), through the PETS 2010 submission server at: https://research.cs.umn.edu/pets/. Notification of acceptance or rejection will be sent to authors by April 10th, 2010 and authors will have the opportunity to revise their papers for the proceedings version due on May 5th, 2010.
HotPETs
As was done last year, part of the symposium will be devoted to HotPETs –the hottest, most exciting research ideas still in a formative state presented in 10 – 20 minutes for discussion and feedback from the audience. Submissions need not be technical in nature; we welcome challenges from other fields whereby our audience may learn about real world needs that require new research and solutions. Our intent is to bring new questions, approaches, and problems to our privacy community for discussion, feedback, and consideration of new approaches based on the diverse expertise of our attendees.
Submissions to HotPETs may be in either a 1 to 4 page extended abstract format, or a full length paper format. We prefer extended abstract format, and all accepted full length submissions must be converted to extended abstract form prior to the camera ready deadline. Successful submissions will have their abstracts printed for hard copy distribution at the event. The abstracts will not be part of the PETS proceedings in order to ensure authors may subsequently publish the expanded work, either in a future PETS or elsewhere. HotPETs submissions are due April 24, 2010, 11:59 UTC (8 pm EDT); submission instructions will appear on the PETS web site.
Panels
We also invite proposals of up to 2 pages for panel discussions or other relevant presentations. In your proposal, (1) describe the nature of the presentation and why it is appropriate to the symposium, (2) suggest a duration for the presentation (ideally between 45 and 90 minutes), (3) give brief descriptions of the presenters, and (4) indicate which presenters have confirmed their availability for the presentation if it is scheduled. Submit your proposal in the same manner as a PET Symposium paper, by the same deadline. The program committee will consider presentation proposals along with other symposium events, and will respond by the paper decision date with an indication of its interest in scheduling the event. The proceedings will contain 1-page abstracts of the presentations that take place at the symposium. Each contact author for an accepted panel proposal must prepare and submit this abstract in the Springer LNCS style by the "PETS camera-ready deadline for proceedings" deadline date. endPage(); ?>