From kapadia at indiana.edu Fri Feb 16 06:49:31 2018 From: kapadia at indiana.edu (Kapadia, Apu Chandrasen) Date: Fri, 16 Feb 2018 11:49:31 +0000 Subject: [Soups-announce] [Call for Submissions] Workshop on The Bright and Dark Sides of Computer Vision: Challenges and Opportunities for Privacy and Security (CV-COPS 2018) Message-ID: [Apologies to those who receive multiple copies of this CFP] CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS - CV-COPS 2018 ================= The Second International Workshop on The Bright and Dark Sides of Computer Vision: Challenges and Opportunities for Privacy and Security (CV-COPS 2018) - in conjunction with the 2018 IEEE Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition (CVPR) June 22, 2018 - Salt Lake City, Utah General information: http://vision.soic.indiana.edu/bright-and-dark-workshop-2018/ Submission server: https://cmt3.research.microsoft.com/CVCOPS2018 ================= IMPORTANT DATES Full paper submission deadline: March 9, 11:59 PM PDT Extended abstract submission deadline: April 1, 11:59PM PDT Author notification date: March 30 Camera ready deadline: April 7, 11:59 PM PDT ABOUT CV-COPS 2018 Computer vision is finally working in the real world, but what are the consequences on privacy and security? For example, recent work shows that vision algorithms can spy on smartphone keypresses from meters away, steal information from inside homes via hacked cameras, exploit social media to de-anonymize blurred faces, and reconstruct images from features like SIFT. Vision could also enhance privacy and security, for example through assistive devices for people with disabilities, phishing detection techniques that incorporate visual features, and image forensic tools. Some technologies present both challenges and opportunities: biometrics techniques could enhance security but may be spoofed, while surveillance systems enhance safety but create potential for abuse. We need to understand the potential threats and opportunities of vision to avoid creating detrimental societal effects and/or facing public backlash. Following up on last year's very successful workshop at CVPR 2017, this workshop will explore the intersection between computer vision and security and privacy to address these issues. SCOPE We welcome original research papers and extended abstracts on topics including, but not limited to: - Computer vision-based security and privacy attacks, - Biometric spoofing, defenses and liveness detection, - Impact of ubiquitous cameras on society, - Captchas and other visual Turing tests for online security, - Privacy of visual data, - Privacy-preserving visual features and representations, - Reversibility of image transformations, - Secure/encrypted computer vision and image processing, - Wearable camera privacy, - Attacks against computer vision systems, - Copyright violation detection, - Counterfeit and forgery detection, - Privacy implications of large-scale visual social media, - Other relevant topics. ORGANIZING COMMITTEE David Crandall, Indiana University Jan-Michael Frahm, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Mario Fritz, Max Planck Apu Kapadia, Indiana University Vitaly Shmatikov, Cornell Tech PROGRAM COMMITTEE Tousif Ahmed, Indiana University Vishnu Boddeti, Michigan State University Terrance Boult, University of Colorado Colorado Springs Karla Brki?, University of Zagreb Ayan Chakrabarti, Washington University in St. Louis Cunjian Chen, Michigan State University Moustapha Cisse, Facebook Anupam Das, Carnegie Mellon University Bill Freeman, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Timnit Gebru, Microsoft Research Roberto Hoyle, Oberlin College Suman Jana, Columbia University Sanjeev Koppal, University of Florida Ashwin Machanavajjhala, Duke University Emanuela Marasco, George Mason University Fabian Monrose, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Seong Joon Oh, Max Planck Nicolas Papernot, Pennsylvania State University True Price, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Raymond Ptucha, Rochester Institute of Technology Gang Qian, ObjectVideo, Inc. Karl Ricanek Jr., University of North Carolina at Wilmington Michael Ryoo, Indiana University Yoichi Sato, University of Tokyo Luke Stark, Dartmouth College Qianru Sun, Max Planck Robert Templeman, U.S. Navy Tom Yeh, University of Colorado at Boulder Ryo Yonetani, University of Tokyo TWO CATEGORIES OF SUBMISSIONS *Full papers* should contain original, unpublished research, and be 4-8 pages (excluding references). Research papers will be published in the CVPR Workshop Proceedings and archived on IEEE eXplore and the Computer Vision Foundation websites. (Submission deadline: March 9, 11:59 PM PDT.) *Extended abstracts* about preliminary, ongoing or published work should be up to 2 pages (including references). Extended abstracts will be published and archived on this website. (Submission deadline: April 1, 11:59PM PDT.) AUTHOR INSTRUCTIONS All submissions should be anonymized and will undergo double-blind peer review. Papers and abstracts must be formatted according to the CVPR guidelines and submitted via the Conference Management Toolkit website at https://cmt3.research.microsoft.com/CVCOPS2018. Accepted submissions will be invited for oral or poster presentation at the workshop. -- Apu Kapadia, Ph.D. Associate Professor School of Informatics and Computing Indiana University Bloomington http://www.cs.indiana.edu/~kapadia/, @apukapadia IU Privacy Lab: http://private.soic.indiana.edu/, @IUPrivLab From lorrie at cs.cmu.edu Mon Feb 19 12:43:28 2018 From: lorrie at cs.cmu.edu (Lorrie Faith Cranor) Date: Mon, 19 Feb 2018 12:43:28 -0500 Subject: [Soups-announce] Fwd: Blackhat note to SOUPS attendees References: <20180219173359.5hktemimmowaye72@endor.shostack.org> Message-ID: <32BC9B8B-DE25-4F04-9818-0AF91D4CF9C2@cs.cmu.edu> > Begin forwarded message: > > From: Adam Shostack > Subject: Blackhat note to SOUPS attendees > Date: February 19, 2018 at 12:33:59 PM EST > To: Lorrie Faith Cranor > > Hi Lorrie, > > Would you mind passing this to the SOUPS-announce list? I think we're > doing well with bringing the sorts of work the SOUPS community does to > this audience. > > > I'm writing to encourage you to submit to BlackHat, where we again > have a human factors track this year. The call for papers is now open, > and closes April 9. > > BlackHat is one of the largest information security conferences of the > year, attracting thousands of security professionals to Las Vegas. The > audience is looking for cutting edge content, presented in an edgy or > fun way. They don't respond well to dry content. > > A bit more on what and how: > https://adam.shostack.org/blog/2018/02/blackhat-and-human-factors/ > > I am, of course, happy to answer questions. > > Adam > From kapadia at indiana.edu Wed Sep 26 21:41:00 2018 From: kapadia at indiana.edu (Kapadia, Apu Chandrasen) Date: Thu, 27 Sep 2018 01:41:00 +0000 Subject: [Soups-announce] IU Interdisciplinary Postdoc Position to Study Photo Sharing Decision Making Message-ID: <1216A661-D45B-4830-8B28-5C0597486E87@indiana.edu> [Apologies if you receive multiple copies!] ---------- Postdoctoral Fellow Department of Psychological & Brain Sciences (PBS) and School of Informatics, Computing, and Engineering (SICE), Indiana University Bloomington Applications are invited for an interdisciplinary postdoctoral position studying decision making related to photo sharing on social media. This position is sponsored jointly by the Developmental Cognitive Neuroscience Laboratory (http://www.indiana.edu/~dcnlab/index.html) and the Privacy Lab (https://private.sice.indiana.edu) at Indiana University. The research will involve large MTurk studies as well as laboratory research focused on behavioral, eye tracking, and physiological measures of decision making in the context of photo sharing. The fellow will join a dynamic and interdisciplinary team of cognitive and computer scientists at Indiana University and will work with Bennett I. Bertenthal and Apu Kapadia. The department of Psychological & Brain Sciences in the College of Arts & Sciences is among the leading psychology departments in the U.S. and includes a large number of faculty, postdocs, and grad students in cognitive as well as neuroscience. IU SICE is first of its kind and among the largest in the country, with more than 125 full-time faculty and more than 1000 graduate students. The School has received public recognition as a ?top-ten program to watch? (Computerworld) thanks to its excellence and leadership in academic programs, interdisciplinary research, placement, and outreach. Indiana University Bloomington is located in the wooded rolling hills of southern Indiana, 50 miles south of Indianapolis, renowned for its top-ranked music school, performing and fine arts, historic campus, cycling traditions, active lifestyle, and natural beauty. Bloomington is a culturally thriving college town with a moderate cost of living. Minimum Qualifications: Applicants should have a PhD in Cognitive Science, Psychology, Computer Science, Informatics, Human Computer Interaction, or a related discipline with a strong background and relevant experience in decision making or usable security and privacy, research methods, and statistics. They should have a record of conducting independent research and communicating results via publications and presentations. In addition, applicants should demonstrate ability for effective participation in collaborative, interdisciplinary research while in residence at Indiana University. Salary: The position is full time, in residence at Indiana University in Bloomington, Indiana, with a salary of $48,000 - $53,000 commensurate with experience, plus generous benefits and funding for project travel. Rank: Postdoctoral Fellow (RSP) Appointment Type: The initial position is for 1 year, renewable for up to 2 additional years based on performance and availability of funds. Apply Online at: https://indiana.peopleadmin.com/postings/6591 Special Instructions: Interested applicants should upload a letter of interest, CV, representative publications, and contact information for three professional references using the above application link. Informal inquiries may also be sent to bbertent at indiana.edu or kapadia at indiana.edu. For Best Consideration Apply By: Oct 14, 2018 Ideal Start Date for position: January 7, 2019 Indiana University is an equal employment and affirmative action employer and a provider of ADA services. All qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to age, ethnicity, color, race, religion, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity or expression, genetic information, marital status, national origin, disability status or protected veteran status. -- Apu Kapadia Associate Director, Security Program Associate Professor of Computer Science School of Informatics, Computing, and Engineering Indiana University Bloomington http://www.cs.indiana.edu/~kapadia/, @apukapadia IU Privacy Lab: http://private.soic.indiana.edu/, @IUPrivLab From chiasson at scs.carleton.ca Tue Oct 30 21:56:52 2018 From: chiasson at scs.carleton.ca (Sonia Chiasson) Date: Tue, 30 Oct 2018 21:56:52 -0400 Subject: [Soups-announce] Carleton Faculty positions References: Message-ID: Hi Everyone, Carleton is currently hiring two security faculty and one of the target areas is usable security. We currently have two faculty members focusing on usable security and it would be great to have more! Please share if you know of any qualified people looking for a position, Thanks Sonia -------- Location: Carleton University, Ottawa, Canada Position: Two tenure-track faculty positions Application Deadline: December 1, 2018 The official job ad is at http://scs.carleton.ca/security19 The School of Computer Science at Carleton University in Ottawa, Canada invites applications for two tenure-track positions in Computer Science at the rank of Assistant Professor. The positions are in computer security, or closely related areas (including usable security). The application deadline is December 1, 2018. The School of Computer Science has 33 full-time faculty members and particular research strengths in bioinformatics, computational geometry, computer security, big data analytics, databases and information systems, graphics, HCI, high-performance computing, machine learning, networks and distributed computing. The School offers a Bachelor of Computer Science degree and graduate programs at the Master?s and Ph.D. level. It also hosts an interdisciplinary Masters of HCI program. ..................................................................................................... Sonia Chiasson, PhD Canada Research Chair in User Centric Cybersecurity Associate Professor, School of Computer Science, Carleton University chiasson at scs.carleton.ca http://chorus.scs.carleton.ca http://www.serene-risc.ca/en ..................................................................................................... -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From egelman at cs.berkeley.edu Fri Nov 9 13:57:08 2018 From: egelman at cs.berkeley.edu (Serge Egelman) Date: Fri, 9 Nov 2018 10:57:08 -0800 Subject: [Soups-announce] ICSI summer internships Message-ID: I'm looking for summer interns interested in usable privacy and security! For those interested, the ICSI call for summer '19 interns is here (including instructions on how to apply): http://www.icir.org/internships.html Specifically, I'm looking for PhD students interested in: -IoT security/privacy issues -Mobile app privacy -Security decision making (e.g., nudging) The deadline to apply is December 1st! Thanks, serge -- /* Serge Egelman, Ph.D. Research Director, Usable Security & Privacy International Computer Science Institute (ICSI) Research Scientist, Electrical Engineering and Computer Sciences (EECS) University of California, Berkeley */ -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From lorrie at cmu.edu Wed Nov 14 17:04:30 2018 From: lorrie at cmu.edu (Lorrie Cranor) Date: Wed, 14 Nov 2018 17:04:30 -0500 Subject: [Soups-announce] Call for Papers: Workshop on Usable Security and Privacy (USEC) 2019 Message-ID: Call for Papers: Workshop on Usable Security and Privacy (USEC) 2019 ** Note November 20 deadline and opportunity to submit rejected CHI submissions if registered by deadline Ensuring effective security and privacy in real-world technology requires considering technical as well as human aspects. Enabling people to manage privacy and security necessitates giving due consideration to the users and the larger operating context within which technology is embedded. We invite submissions on all aspects of human factors including adoption and usability in the context of security and privacy. USEC 2019 aims to bring together researchers already engaged in this interdisciplinary effort with other computer science researchers in areas such as visualization, artificial intelligence, machine learning, and theoretical computer science as well as researchers from other domains such as economics and psychology. We particularly encourage collaborative research from authors in multiple disciplines. This year, and possibly for future USEC workshops, exceptional USEC papers will be invited to publish extended versions in a special issue of the Journal of Cybersecurity. Topics include, but are not limited to: ? Human factors related to the deployment of the Internet of Things (IoT). ? Usable security/privacy evaluation of existing and/or proposed solutions. ? Mental models that contribute to, or complicate, security and privacy. ? Lessons learned from designing, deploying, managing, or evaluating security and privacy technologies. ? Foundations of usable security and privacy incl. usable security and privacy patterns. ? Ethical, psychological, sociological and economic aspects of security and privacy technologies. ? Usable security and privacy research that targets information professionals (e.g. administrators or developers). ? Reports on replications of previously published studies and experiments. ? Reports on failed usable security studies or experiments, with the focus on the lessons learned from such experience. It is the aim of USEC to contribute to an increase of the scientific quality of research in human factors in security and privacy. To this end, we encourage replication studies to validate previous research findings. Papers in these categories should be clearly marked as such and will not be judged against regular submissions on novelty. Rather, they will be judged based on scientific quality and value to the community. We also encourage reports of failed experiments, since their publication will serve to highlight the lessons learned and prevent others falling into the same traps. Note on CHI submissions: For concurrent CHI submissions, please register the paper?s abstract at the paper deadline (20 Nov) . Since the CHI notification is late in the USEC reviewing timeline, we invite authors of rejected CHI papers to submit their CHI submissions, with reviews and rebuttal appended, to USEC until December 15th. These papers will be added to the online discussion for USEC. If no paper is submitted until 15 Dec, we consider the abstract withdrawn from USEC. Submission Instructions All submissions must be original work; authors must clearly document any overlap with previously published or simultaneously submitted papers from any of the authors. We are looking for submissions of 5 to 10 pages, excluding references and supplementary materials using the NDSS USEC format found at: https://www.ndss-symposium.org/ndss2019/templates/ Paper length: We encourage authors to submit papers of appropriate length for the research contribution. If your research contribution only requires 5-7 pages, please only submit 5-7 pages (plus references). Shorter papers with be reviewed like any other paper and not penalized. Papers shorter than 5 pages or longer than 10 pages (excluding references) will not be considered. Submitting supplementary material that adds depth to the contribution and/or contributes to the submission?s replicability is strongly encouraged. Supplemental material must be linked to in the paper in an anonymous way as we cannot support direct upload to the submission system. Reviewing will be double blind. USEC 2019 is open to submissions here: https://usec2019.l3s.uni-hannover.de/hotcrp/ Work in Progress USEC 2019 will accept Work in Progress submissions. These submissions must be clearly marked work in progress and follow the same formatting instructions as full submissions. Work in Progress papers can be submitted with an analysis plan in case the paper is unfinished by the submission deadline. Accepted Work in Progress submissions will be included in the USEC proceedings and be citable. If they are completed by the time of the camera-ready deadline, they will be published as full papers. Otherwise they will be marked clearly as Work in Progress. In the latter case of Work in Progress papers, they can be republished with a ?significant? revision. For determining the ?significance? of a revision, USEC will follow ACM policies on Pre-publication Evaluation (https://www.acm.org/publications/policies/pre-publication-evaluation) and Prior Publication and Simultaneous Submissions (https://www.acm.org/publications/policies/simultaneous-submissions). Proceedings Accepted papers will be included in official proceedings published by the Internet Society prior to the workshop. Important Dates - Paper submission: 20 Nov. 2018 (including abstract registration of concurrent CHI submissions) - Submission of CHI submissions: 15 Dec. 2018 - Acceptance Notification: 20 Dec. 2018 - Camera-ready - 15 Jan. 2019 - Workshop: 24 Feb. 2019 (co-located with NDSS 2019) USEC 2019 Program Co-Chairs Mary Frances Theofanos, NIST Yasemin Acar, Leibniz University, Hannover USEC Steering Committee Andrew A. Adams, Meiji University Jim Blythe, University of Southern California Jean Camp, Indiana University Angela Sasse, University College London Matthew Smith, Bonn University USEC 2019 Program Committee Andrew Adams, Meiji University Adam Aviv, United States Naval Academy Lujo Bauer, Carnegie Mellon University Ingolf Becker, University College London Zinaida Benenson, University of Erlangen-Nuremberg Matt Bishop, University of California Jasmine Bowers, University of Florida Pamela Briggs, Northumbria University Karoline Busse, Rheinische Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universit?t Bonn Joe Calandrino, Federal Trade Commission Marshini Chetty, Princeton University Heather Crawford, Florida Institute of Technology Tamara Denning, University of Utah Markus D?rmuth, Ruhr-University Bochum Sascha Fahl, Ruhr-University Bochum Alisa Frik, Berkeley Simson Garfinkel, US Census Bureau Vaibhav Garg, Comcast Jens Grossklags, Technical University of Munich Julie Haney, NIST Marian Harbach, Google Ann Hobson, George Mason University Apu Kapadia, University of Indiana, Bloomington Patrick Gage Kelley, Google Kat Krol, Google Katharina Krombholz, CISPA Helmholtz-Center Ravi Kuber, University of Maryland, Baltimore County Ada Lerner, Wellesley College Simon Parkin, University College London Sarah Pearman, Carnegie Mellon University Joel Reardon, University of Calgary Bradley Reaves, North Carolina State University Elissa Redmiles, University of Maryland Angela Sasse, Ruhr-University Bochum Kent Seamons, Brigham Young University Divya Sharma, Google Manya Sleeper, Google Matthew Smith, Rheinische Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universit?t Bonn Elizabeth Stobert, National Research Council Canada Blase Ur, University of Chicago Emanuel von Zeschwitz, Rheinische Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universit?t Bonn Nicholas Weaver, ICSI Berkeley Charles Weir, Lancaster University Tara Whalen, Google Yaxing Yao, Syracuse University Daniel Zappala, Brigham Young University From spearman at cmu.edu Tue Nov 20 11:00:19 2018 From: spearman at cmu.edu (Sarah Pearman) Date: Tue, 20 Nov 2018 11:00:19 -0500 Subject: [Soups-announce] Soups-announce 46:2 [USEC deadline extended to Nov 27] Message-ID: The USEC 2019 deadline has been extended to November 27. As a reminder, rejected CHI papers may also be submitted to USEC. If you have a concurrent CHI submission that you may want to submit to USEC, please register the paper's abstract by November 27. Since CHI decisions are to be released December 10, authors of rejected CHI papers may submit their CHI submissions, with reviews and rebuttal appended, to USEC until December 15th. Sarah On Thu, Nov 15, 2018 at 12:00 PM < soups-announce-request at mailman.srv.cs.cmu.edu> wrote: > Send Soups-announce mailing list submissions to > soups-announce at mailman.srv.cs.cmu.edu > > To subscribe or unsubscribe via the World Wide Web, visit > https://mailman.srv.cs.cmu.edu/mailman/listinfo/soups-announce > or, via email, send a message with subject or body 'help' to > soups-announce-request at mailman.srv.cs.cmu.edu > > You can reach the person managing the list at > soups-announce-owner at mailman.srv.cs.cmu.edu > > When replying, please edit your Subject line so it is more specific > than "Re: Contents of Soups-announce digest..." > > > Today's Topics: > > 1. Call for Papers: Workshop on Usable Security and Privacy > (USEC) 2019 (Lorrie Cranor) > > > ---------------------------------------------------------------------- > > Message: 1 > Date: Wed, 14 Nov 2018 17:04:30 -0500 > From: Lorrie Cranor > To: > Subject: [Soups-announce] Call for Papers: Workshop on Usable Security > and Privacy (USEC) 2019 > Message-ID: > Content-Type: text/plain; charset="utf-8" > > Call for Papers: Workshop on Usable Security and Privacy (USEC) 2019 > > ** Note November 20 deadline and opportunity to submit rejected CHI > submissions if registered by deadline > > Ensuring effective security and privacy in real-world technology requires > considering technical as well as human aspects. Enabling people to manage > privacy and security necessitates giving due consideration to the users and > the larger operating context within which technology is embedded. > > > We invite submissions on all aspects of human factors including adoption > and usability in the context of security and privacy. USEC 2019 aims to > bring together researchers already engaged in this interdisciplinary effort > with other computer science researchers in areas such as visualization, > artificial intelligence, machine learning, and theoretical computer science > as well as researchers from other domains such as economics and psychology. > We particularly encourage collaborative research from authors in multiple > disciplines. > > This year, and possibly for future USEC workshops, exceptional USEC papers > will be invited to publish extended versions in a special issue of the > Journal of Cybersecurity. > > Topics include, but are not limited to: > > ? Human factors related to the deployment of the Internet of > Things (IoT). > ? Usable security/privacy evaluation of existing and/or proposed > solutions. > ? Mental models that contribute to, or complicate, security and > privacy. > ? Lessons learned from designing, deploying, managing, or > evaluating security and privacy technologies. > ? Foundations of usable security and privacy incl. usable security > and privacy patterns. > ? Ethical, psychological, sociological and economic aspects of > security and privacy technologies. > ? Usable security and privacy research that targets information > professionals (e.g. administrators or developers). > ? Reports on replications of previously published studies and > experiments. > ? Reports on failed usable security studies or experiments, with > the focus on the lessons learned from such experience. > > > It is the aim of USEC to contribute to an increase of the scientific > quality of research in human factors in security and privacy. To this end, > we encourage replication studies to validate previous research findings. > Papers in these categories should be clearly marked as such and will not be > judged against regular submissions on novelty. Rather, they will be judged > based on scientific quality and value to the community. We also encourage > reports of failed experiments, since their publication will serve to > highlight the lessons learned and prevent others falling into the same > traps. > > > Note on CHI submissions: > > For concurrent CHI submissions, please register the paper?s abstract at > the paper deadline (20 Nov) . > > Since the CHI notification is late in the USEC reviewing timeline, we > invite authors of rejected CHI papers to submit their CHI submissions, with > reviews and rebuttal appended, to USEC until December 15th. These papers > will be added to the online discussion for USEC. > > If no paper is submitted until 15 Dec, we consider the abstract withdrawn > from USEC. > > > Submission Instructions > All submissions must be original work; authors must clearly document any > overlap with previously published or simultaneously submitted papers from > any of the authors. We are looking for submissions of 5 to 10 pages, > excluding references and supplementary materials using the NDSS USEC format > found at: https://www.ndss-symposium.org/ndss2019/templates/ > > > Paper length: We encourage authors to submit papers of appropriate length > for the research contribution. If your research contribution only requires > 5-7 pages, please only submit 5-7 pages (plus references). Shorter papers > with be reviewed like any other paper and not penalized. Papers shorter > than 5 pages or longer than 10 pages (excluding references) will not be > considered. > > > Submitting supplementary material that adds depth to the contribution > and/or contributes to the submission?s replicability is strongly > encouraged. Supplemental material must be linked to in the paper in an > anonymous way as we cannot support direct upload to the submission system. > > Reviewing will be double blind. > > > > USEC 2019 is open to submissions here: > https://usec2019.l3s.uni-hannover.de/hotcrp/ > > Work in Progress > USEC 2019 will accept Work in Progress submissions. These submissions must > be clearly marked work in progress and follow the same formatting > instructions as full submissions. Work in Progress papers can be submitted > with an analysis plan in case the paper is unfinished by the submission > deadline. Accepted Work in Progress submissions will be included in the > USEC proceedings and be citable. If they are completed by the time of the > camera-ready deadline, they will be published as full papers. Otherwise > they will be marked clearly as Work in Progress. In the latter case of Work > in Progress papers, they can be republished with a ?significant? revision. > For determining the ?significance? of a revision, USEC will follow ACM > policies on Pre-publication Evaluation ( > https://www.acm.org/publications/policies/pre-publication-evaluation) and > Prior Publication and Simultaneous Submissions ( > https://www.acm.org/publications/policies/simultaneous-submissions). > Proceedings > Accepted papers will be included in official proceedings published by the > Internet Society prior to the workshop. > > > > Important Dates > > - Paper submission: 20 Nov. 2018 (including abstract registration of > concurrent CHI submissions) > > - Submission of CHI submissions: 15 Dec. 2018 > > - Acceptance Notification: 20 Dec. 2018 > > - Camera-ready - 15 Jan. 2019 > > - Workshop: 24 Feb. 2019 (co-located with NDSS 2019) > > > > USEC 2019 Program Co-Chairs > Mary Frances Theofanos, NIST > > Yasemin Acar, Leibniz University, Hannover > > USEC Steering Committee > Andrew A. Adams, Meiji University > > Jim Blythe, University of Southern California > > Jean Camp, Indiana University > > Angela Sasse, University College London > > Matthew Smith, Bonn University > > > > USEC 2019 Program Committee > Andrew Adams, Meiji University > > Adam Aviv, United States Naval Academy > > Lujo Bauer, Carnegie Mellon University > > Ingolf Becker, University College London > > Zinaida Benenson, University of Erlangen-Nuremberg > > Matt Bishop, University of California > > Jasmine Bowers, University of Florida > > Pamela Briggs, Northumbria University > > Karoline Busse, Rheinische Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universit?t Bonn > > Joe Calandrino, Federal Trade Commission > > Marshini Chetty, Princeton University > > Heather Crawford, Florida Institute of Technology > > Tamara Denning, University of Utah > > Markus D?rmuth, Ruhr-University Bochum > > Sascha Fahl, Ruhr-University Bochum > > Alisa Frik, Berkeley > > Simson Garfinkel, US Census Bureau > > Vaibhav Garg, Comcast > > Jens Grossklags, Technical University of Munich > > Julie Haney, NIST > > Marian Harbach, Google > > Ann Hobson, George Mason University > > Apu Kapadia, University of Indiana, Bloomington > > Patrick Gage Kelley, Google > > Kat Krol, Google > > Katharina Krombholz, CISPA Helmholtz-Center > > Ravi Kuber, University of Maryland, Baltimore County > > Ada Lerner, Wellesley College > > Simon Parkin, University College London > > Sarah Pearman, Carnegie Mellon University > > Joel Reardon, University of Calgary > > Bradley Reaves, North Carolina State University > > Elissa Redmiles, University of Maryland > > Angela Sasse, Ruhr-University Bochum > > Kent Seamons, Brigham Young University > > Divya Sharma, Google > > Manya Sleeper, Google > > Matthew Smith, Rheinische Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universit?t Bonn > > Elizabeth Stobert, National Research Council Canada > > Blase Ur, University of Chicago > > Emanuel von Zeschwitz, Rheinische Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universit?t Bonn > > Nicholas Weaver, ICSI Berkeley > > Charles Weir, Lancaster University > > Tara Whalen, Google > > Yaxing Yao, Syracuse University > > Daniel Zappala, Brigham Young University > > > > > > ------------------------------ > > Subject: Digest Footer > > _______________________________________________ > Soups-announce mailing list > Soups-announce at mailman.srv.cs.cmu.edu > https://mailman.srv.cs.cmu.edu/mailman/listinfo/soups-announce > > ------------------------------ > > End of Soups-announce Digest, Vol 46, Issue 2 > ********************************************* > -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From patil at indiana.edu Sun Nov 25 21:09:29 2018 From: patil at indiana.edu (Sameer Patil) Date: Sun, 25 Nov 2018 18:09:29 -0800 Subject: [Soups-announce] Multiple usable privacy/security postdoc positions available at Indiana University Message-ID: <126CA1D3-5792-49B9-A459-0943B1B44F0A@indiana.edu> The Center for Security and Privacy in Informatics, Computing, and Engineering (SPICE - https://spice.sice.indiana.edu) seeks multiple interdisciplinary postdoctoral fellows in domains including but not limited to: human computer interaction (HCI), social media and social computing, mobile and ubiquitous computing, Internet of Things (IoT), privacy enhancing technologies (PETs), and software engineering. The fellows will join a dynamic, interdisciplinary, and collaborative research environment with ample opportunities for career development and mentoring. IU SICE is the first of its kind and among the largest in the country, with more than 125 full-time faculty and more than 1000 graduate students. SICE has received recognition as a ?top-ten program to watch? (Computerworld) thanks to its excellence and leadership in academic programs, interdisciplinary research, placement, and outreach. IUB is also renowned for its top-ranked music school, performing and fine arts, and historic campus. Bloomington is located in the wooded rolling hills of southern Indiana, 50 miles south of Indianapolis. It is a culturally thriving college town with a moderate cost of living, cycling traditions, active lifestyle, and natural beauty. Minimum Qualifications: A PhD in Computer Science, Informatics, Engineering, Psychology, Communication, or related discipline is required, with strong background, interest, and experience in privacy or security. ABD candidates may apply but will need the PhD prior to start. Applicants should have a record of independent research and publications along with the ability to participate in interdisciplinary collaborations. Salary: Commensurate with qualifications and experience Appointment Type: Twelve-month non-tenure-track appointment with potential for extension subject to performance and funding Apply Online: https://indiana.peopleadmin.com/postings/6700 Questions may be sent to patil at indiana.edu or kapadia at indiana.edu Start date: Negotiable Deadline: Apply ASAP, preferably no later than January 5th. From e.decristofaro at ucl.ac.uk Mon Dec 3 10:21:31 2018 From: e.decristofaro at ucl.ac.uk (De Cristofaro, Emiliano) Date: Mon, 3 Dec 2018 15:21:31 +0000 Subject: [Soups-announce] Three Faculty Positions in Information Security -- University College London (UCL) Message-ID: *** Three Faculty Positions at all level -- UCL Computer Science *** See: https://tinyurl.com/ucl-infosec-positions-2018 Apply by: January 10th, 2019 The Department of Computer Science at University College London (UCL) invites applications for three faculty positions at all levels in the area of Information Security. We seek world-class talent; candidates must have an outstanding research track record. Appointments will be made at the rank of Lecturer, Associate Professor, or Professor, depending on seniority. We seek applicants with expertise and experience that complements or builds on our current strengths, including but not limited to, the areas of: cybercrime, human factors in security, systems and network security, verification, embedded systems security, and software security. Since we are an experimental Computer Science department, and UCL is strongly committed to multi-disciplinary research, we are looking for researchers who are interested in collaboration with colleagues in the Faculty of Engineering (e.g., Crime Science) and with other research groups and centers within the Computer Science department, e.g., Systems and Networks, Computational Statistics & Machine Learning (CSML), UCL Interaction Centre (UCLIC). We seek candidates who can support the growth of the Computer Department through conducting research, teaching, outreach and entrepreneurial activities in the area of Information Security as well as the supervision of undergraduate, taught graduate and/or research graduate students. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From jonathan.anderson at mun.ca Tue Dec 4 21:37:36 2018 From: jonathan.anderson at mun.ca (Jonathan Anderson) Date: Tue, 04 Dec 2018 23:07:36 -0330 Subject: [Soups-announce] One month left to submit to SPW2019 Message-ID: <78e662$6o71g@smtp03.ucs.mun.ca> The organizing committee of the International Workshop on Security Protocols would like to remind you that the twenty-seventh workshop will be held 10-12 April 2019 at Trinity College in Cambridge, UK. Attendance is by invitation only: we invite the submission of position papers by 4 Jan 2019, and authors of selected papers will be invited to participate in the workshop. https://www.cl.cam.ac.uk/events/spw/2019 The theme of the 2019 workshop is "security protocols for humans". Getting protocol details right is critical in the presence of a malicious adversary, but so is understanding the context in which a protocol is deployed: protocols are components of larger systems that human beings put their trust in. How can we design protocols to expose meaningful information about state and functionality to their users? What are the consequences when we don't? How can we bridge the gap between technical definitions of protocol correctness and users' security expectations? As in previous years, the theme should inspire rather than constrain: all submissions in the broad area of security protocols will be considered. Authors should submit position papers or extended abstracts to jonathan.anderson at mun.ca by 4 Jan 2019; responses will be given by 11 Feb 2019. From pkumar12 at umd.edu Thu Dec 6 13:23:05 2018 From: pkumar12 at umd.edu (Priya Kumar) Date: Thu, 6 Dec 2018 13:23:05 -0500 Subject: [Soups-announce] Open Rank Tenure Track Position at UMD -- Socio-technical Cybersecurity Message-ID: The University of Maryland College of Information Studies seeks candidates for an open rank tenure-track position (Assistant, Associate or Full Professor who are interested in studying and teaching *socio-technical aspects of cybersecurity.* University of Maryland College of Information Studies Open Rank Tenure / Tenure-Track Faculty (Assistant Professor, Associate Professor, or Professor) Best Consideration Date: 1/4/2019 To Apply: https://ejobs.umd.edu/postings/65528 A socio-technical approach to cybersecurity recognizes that to protect our information and critical infrastructure we must consider human, social, organizational, economic, institutional, and technical factors, as well as the complex interactions among them. Creating, maintaining, operating infrastructural systems that are resilient in the face of threats that include malicious attacks, random vandalism, natural disasters, and information warfare necessarily requires fundamental advances in our understanding of the socio-technical aspects of cybersecurity. The College of Information Studies at the University of Maryland, College Park (Maryland?s iSchool), invites applications for a tenure-track Assistant Professor or tenured Associate Professor or Professor position in socio-technical aspects of cybersecurity. The successful candidate will engage in an active program of high-impact research; provide research advising to students at all levels; develop courses and teach in the College?s undergraduate, graduate, and non-degree programs; and engage in service to the profession and shared governance within the university. Minimum Qualifications: The successful candidate will have a strong interest in research and teaching related to socio-technical aspects of cybersecurity. Within this broad domain are a wide range of specific topics, methodological approaches, theoretical perspectives, and disciplines. We welcome applications from scholars interested in any socio-technical aspect of cybersecurity who are working with research grounded in theory, rooted in empirical methods, and producing broadly applicable and transferable results that augment policy, knowledge, and practice. We seek exceptional candidates with high quality research and publication records in interdisciplinary fields that include or blend social and behavioral sciences, economics, science and technology studies, law, computer science, informatics, information systems, and/or computer science. A Ph.D. or equivalent degree is required at the time of appointment. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... 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