DIMACS Workshop on Theft in E-Commerce: Content, Identity, and Service
April 14 - 15, 2005
DIMACS Center, CoRE Building, Rutgers University, Piscataway, NJ
- Organizers:
- Drew Dean, SRI International, ddean@csl.sri.com
- Markus Jakobsson, Indiana University, markus@indiana.edu
Presented under the auspices of the
Special Focus on Communication Security and Information Privacy and
Slides:
- Alexandr Andoni, MIT
Some are not thieves!
- John Black, University of Colorado
ID Theft: Methods and Agenda
- Jean Camp, IUB
Phishing - A Social Disorder
- Aaron Emigh, Radix Labs
Anti-Phishing Technology
- Virgil Griffith, IUB
Deriving Mother's Maiden Names Using Public Records
- Markus Jakobsson, IUB, CACR
Distributed Phishing Attacks
- Burt Kaliski, RSA Security
Passwords Don't Get No Respect - - Or, How to Make the Most of (Weak) Shared Secrets
- Naftaly Minsky, Rutgers University
Preventing Theft by Keeping Good Company
- Steve Myers, IUB
Delayed Password Disclosure Mutual Authentication to Fight Phishing
- Panos Papadimitratos, Virginia Tech
Safeguarding Wireless Service Access
Safeguarding Wireless Service Access
- Sean Smith, Dartmouth College
Expressing Human Trust in Distributed Systems: the Mismatch Between Tools and Reality
- Mike Stepp, University of Arizona
PhishHook: A Tool to Detect and Prevent Phishing Attacks
- Paul Van Oorschot, Carleton University, Canada
Identity Theft and Legitimately - Minted Fraudulent Credentials
- Min Wu, MIT
Do Security Toolbars Actually Prevent Phishing Attacks?
- Moti Yung, Columbia University
Kleptography: The Outsider Inside Your Crypto Devices, and its Trust Implications
Workshop Index
DIMACS Homepage
Contacting the Center
Document last modified on May 3, 2005.