DIMACS/DyDAn Workshop on Internet Privacy: Facilitating Seamless Data Movement with Appropriate Controls
September 18 - 19, 2008
DIMACS Center, CoRE Building, Rutgers University, Piscataway, NJ
- Organizers:
- Dan Boneh, Stanford University, dabo at cs.stanford.edu
- Ed Felten, Princeton University, felten at cs.princeton.edu
- Helen Nissenbaum, New York University, helen.nissenbaum at nyu.edu
Presented under the auspices of the DIMACS Special Focus on Algorithmic Foundations of the Internet, the DIMACS Special Focus on Communication Security and Information Privacy and the Center for Dynamic Data Analysis (DyDAn).
Workshop Program:
Thursday, September 18, 2008
8:45 - 9:30 Breakfast and registration
9:30 - 9:45 Welcome and opening remarks
Mel Janowitz, DIMACS Associate Director
Session 1:
9:45 - 10:15 Pirate Evolution in Broadcast Encryption Schemes
Aggelos Kiayias, University of Connecticut
10:15 - 11:00 AACS, BD+, and the Limits of DRM
Alex Halderman, University of Michigan
11:00 - 11:45 Combinatorial Approaches for Efficient Coalition Detection in Traitor Tracing
Hongxia Jin, IBM Almaden
11:45 - 1:15 Lunch
Session 2:
1:15 - 1:45 TrackMeNot: Exploring Obfuscation Strategies in Web Search
Daniel Howe, New York University
1:45 - 2:15 PWS: A Privacy Application for Web Search
Felipe Saint-Jean, Yale University
2:30 - 3:00 Break
Session 3:
3:00 - 4:00 Security, Obscurity, and Information Sharing
Peter Swire, Ohio State University
4:00 - 4:45 Panel: "Aggregation, Mining, Profiling: Who should be in control?"
Moderator: Rebecca Wright, DIMACS
Speakers: Alex Selkirk,The Common Data Project
Solon Barocas (NYU): Voter Profiling
Friday, September 19, 2008
8:45 - 9:30 Breakfast and registration
Session 4:
9:30 - 10:15 Ensuring that Statistical Data Do Not Reveal Too Much about the Underlying Private Data
Paul Massell, U.S. Census Bureau
10:15 - 11:00 Pinning Down "Privacy" in Statistical Databases
Adam Smith, Pennsylvania State University
11:00 - 11:20 Break
11:20 - 11:50 Q-RICE: Query Rewriting and Policy Integration for access Control and Enforcement
Faiz Currim and Eunjin Jung, University of Iowa
11:50 - 12:20 How to Eat the Cake without ever Having it---or, Preventing Servers from Abusing the Privacy of their Clients
Naftaly Minsky, Rutgers University
12:20 - 1:40 Lunch
Session 5:
1:45 - 2:15 Privacy and Anonymity in Social Networks
Arvind Narayanan, University of Texas, Austin
2:15 - 2:45 Peer-Produced Privacy Violations
James Grimmelmann, New York Law School
2:45 - 3:15 Break
3:15 - 3:45 An Interdisciplinary Framework for Defining and Distinguishing
Security Desiderata for Personally Sensitive Information
Nina Feferman, DIMACS and Aaron D. Jaggard, DIMACS
3:45 - 4:15 Implications of Cold Boot to Internet Privacy
Ed Felten, Princeton University
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Document last modified on September 16, 2008.