Dear Spartans,
the IFIP Summer Schools Privacy and Identity Management are an established
interdisciplinary forum to discuss technical and non-technical issues related to privacy
protection, indentity management and also cybersecurity. This year representatives of two
Cybersecurity Competence Networks are involved in the organization of this summer school
(Michael Friedewald, WP 2 lead from SPARTA, Stephan Krenn and Kai Rannenberg from
Cybersec4Europe) and it would be a good opportunity for SPARTA to show its colours.
Junior SPARTANs are invited to submit papers related to their current project or PhD
work.
Senior SPARTANs are invited to suggest tutorials and workshops.
M.Friedewald
14th IFIP Summer School on Privacy and Identity Management
19-23 August 2019 in Brugg/Windisch, Switzerland
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We are inviting contributions to this Summer School from students who are at the stage of
preparing a master or a PhD thesis as well as young researchers and practitioners. The
school is interactive in character, and is composed of plenary lectures and workshops
based around Master/PhD students’ presentations. The principle is to encourage young
academic and industry entrants to the privacy and identity management world to share their
own ideas, build up a collegial relationship with others, gain experience in making
presentations, and potentially publish a paper through the resulting book proceedings.
This year, the IFIP Summer School on Privacy and Identity Management is particularly
interested in contributions on Data for Better Living looking at the perspectives of
Artificial Intelligence (AI) and Privacy.
For more information see:
https://www.ifip-summerschool.org/
CALL FOR PAPER SUBMISSIONS
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The Summer School takes a holistic approach to society and technology and supports
interdisciplinary exchange through keynote and plenary lectures, tutorials, workshops, and
research paper presentations. In particular, participants’ contributions that combine any
of the following approaches are welcome: technical, legal, regulatory, socioeconomic,
social or societal, political, ethical, anthropological, philosophical, historical,
psychological, or media & communication studies perspectives. The interdisciplinary
character of the work has long been fundamental to the School.
The research paper presentations and the workshops focus on involving students, and on
encouraging the publication of high-quality, thorough, research papers by students/young
researchers. To this end, the School has a three-phase review process for submitted
papers. In the first phase, submissions are short abstracts. Submissions within the scope
of the call are selected for presentation at the School. For accepted submissions, the
full papers of up to 16 pages in length in Springer LNCS format are to be submitted before
the Summer School takes place and they appear in the (unreviewed) pre-proceedings. In a
second review phase, the full papers are reviewed soon after the Summer School. The
students are invited to resubmit their full papers after they have revised them based on
two sets of feedback: the discussions that took place at the Summer School, as well as a
formal written review by programme committee members. In the third review phase, after the
full papers are resubmitted, they are reviewed again for inclusion in the School’s
proceedings, which will be published by Springer.
Submissions by senior researchers and participants in European, national, or
regional/community research projects are also very welcome and are generally published in
a separate section of the book volume.
CALL FOR TUTORIALS AND WORKSHOPS
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The School also welcomes contributions in the form of tutorials and workshop proposals
from a wide range of disciplines (e.g. computer science, economics, ethics, law,
psychology, sociology, political and other social sciences, surveillance studies, media
and communication studies, and others). The timelines for submission of these tutorials
and workshops are the same as those of the student papers. Topics of interest include but
are not limited to: concepts, technologies and applications, design, enforcement
mechanisms, effects, attitudes, and user practices.
Tutorials are expected to last one or two hours. Proposals should contain a short summary
and state the level and background required for attendees to follow the tutorial.
Workshops are expected to last one or two hours and must generate short papers that
recapitulate the outcome and the kinds of discussions raised in the School, for inclusion
in the post-proceedings. Proposals should contain a short statement summarising the
topic(s) to be discussed and the expected contributions from the audience members, e.g.
responding to a questionnaire or conducting a small experiment. Proposers should indicate
whether any special equipment is needed for the workshop, such as audiovisual systems or
computational equipment and support.
TOPICS OF INTEREST
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The topics of interest include, but are not limited to:
General Topics
• Privacy-enhancing technologies (PETs) & transparency-enhancing technologies (TETs)
• Privacy and identity management (services, technologies, infrastructures, usability
aspects, legal and socio-economic aspects)
• Privacy and security in citizens’ digital communications, online platforms, e-mail and
instant messaging
• Privacy protection and in particular confidentiality of communications by both
traditional players/incumbents and OTTs
• Privacy-by-design, privacy-by-default, value-sensitive design, ethical-by-design,
human-rights-by-design, data protection/privacy impact assessments, data protection on the
ground
• Social accountability
• Privacy standards and seals
• Digital literacy and data (infrastructure) literacy
• Regulatory regimes and instruments
More specific topics
• Privacy attacks and data breaches: the challenges
• Privacy threats, privacy attacks against or using AI, AI and data breaches
• Adversarial learning and identity management
• AI for profiling and tracking technologies, online anonymity, surveillance, video
surveillance
• AI’s impact on fundamental rights and legal principles
o protection of personal data,
o right to non-discrimination,
o rule of law,
o presumption of innocence,
o children’s rights, etc.
• AI and the fight against cybercrime
o AI, data retention and law enforcement
• Corporate and organisational views on AI and privacy and data protection measures
o Challenges facing large corporations, small- and medium-sized enterprises,
micro-enterprises and entrepreneurs, and a wide range of categories of professions and
occupations in relation to AI applications
o Challenges facing AI in healthcare, finance, heavy industry, or crime prevention
and detection
o Public service AI, Public service algorithms, public interest technologies
• Designing societally compatible AI
o Effects of AI on discrimination, bias, social profiling, social exclusion,
digital divides, communities, societies and cultures
o Public attitudes to and trust regarding the deployment of AI and the impact on
security, privacy, and identity
o How people or organisations participate in shaping AI applications
• Codes of conduct; Ethical guidelines and charters for AI
ABSTRACT SUBMISSION AND REVIEW PROCESS
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The School has a three-phase review process for submitted papers.
(1) In the first phase, papers will be selected for presentation at the school by the
Summer School Programme Committee based on reviews of a short
2-4-page abstract.
The abstract submissions should contain a concise problem statement, an outline, and clear
messages (they should not be about work “to be done”).
(2) On acceptance of the abstract, authors should submit their full papers of up to 16
pages in length in Springer LNCS format. These versions of the papers will be made
available to all participants in the (unreviewed) summer school
pre-proceedings that will be published online.
(3) After the summer school, authors will have the opportunity to submit their revised
full papers (again in Springer LNCS format, max. 16 pages). These versions should address
the questions and discussions raised on the paper
during the summer school as well as in the detailed reviews provided by the Programme
Committee members. They will be considered for publication in the summer school
proceedings by the official IFIP publisher (Springer). The papers to be included in the
final proceedings will again be reviewed and finally selected by the summer school
Programme Committee. Students are expected to try to publish their work through this
volume.
All paper submissions must be made in PDF format, in the Springer LNCS template, and using
the Easychair System:
Please use the
https://www.springer.com/computer/lncs?SGWID=0-164-6-793341-0 for your
submissions!
https://www.springer.com/gp/computer-science/lncs/conference-proceedings-gu…
https://easychair.org/my/conference.cgi?conf=ifipsc2019
IMPORTANT DATES
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06 May 2019: Extended Abstracts for Presentations (2-4 pages)
13 May 2019: Extended Abstracts for Workshops and Tutorials (2-4 pages)
06 Jun 2019: Notifications
05 Aug 2019: Full Papers (up to 16 pages) for Pre-Proceedings
19-23 Aug 2019: Presentation at Summer School
23 Sep 2019: Feedback to Authors
25 Oct 2019: Full Papers for Springer Proceedings (up to 16 pages)
29 Nov 2019: Notifications
20 Dec 2019: Camera-Ready Copies
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Dr. Michael Friedewald
IFIP Summerschoool Programme Co-Chair
SPARTA Responsibility Activities Lead
Fraunhofer-Institut für System- und Innovationsforschung ISI
Breslauer Straße 48 | 76139 Karlsruhe
fon: +49 721 6809-146 (-189, ass.) | fax: +49 721 6809-77-146
mailto: mailto:michael.friedewald@isi.fraunhofer.de