[AISWorld] PoPETs 2017 issue 4 call for papers

Tariq Elahi mtelahi at uwaterloo.ca
Sun Feb 19 09:04:53 EST 2017


[Apologies to those who receive multiple copies of this CFP]

CALL FOR PAPERS - PoPeTs 2017, Issue 4 / PETS 2017

The deadline for PoPETs 2017, Issue 4 is one week away: February 28 (11:59PM Samoa Time, UTC-11), 2017. PoPETs/PETS now has 4 deadlines a year; submit whenever you feel ready!

Read the CFP below for more details on our hybrid journal/symposium
model, which includes the option to resubmit with major revisions to a
subsequent deadline. See the web site (https://petsymposium.org/) for full information, including
submission guidelines (https://petsymposium.org/authors.php).

Papers must be submitted via the submission server for Issue 4
at: https://submit.petsymposium.org/2017.4/

We look forward to your submissions!

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Call for Papers
===============
17th Privacy Enhancing Technologies Symposium (PETS 2017) 
Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA 
July 2017 
General information: https://petsymposium.org/ 
Submission server: https://submit.petsymposium.org/2017.4/
================

The annual Privacy Enhancing Technologies Symposium (PETS) brings together privacy experts from around the world to present and discuss recent advances and new perspectives on research in privacy technologies. The 17th PETS event will be organised by the University of Minnesota and held in Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA, July 18 -- 21, 2017.

Papers undergo a journal-style reviewing process and accepted papers are published in the journal Proceedings on Privacy Enhancing Technologies (PoPETs). Submitted papers should present novel practical and/or theoretical research into the design, analysis, experimentation, or fielding of privacy-enhancing technologies. While PETS/PoPETs has traditionally been home to research on anonymity systems and privacy-oriented cryptography, we strongly encourage submissions on a number of both well-established and emerging privacy-related topics, for which examples are provided below.

PoPETs, a scholarly, open access journal for timely research papers on privacy, has been established as a way to improve reviewing and publication quality while retaining the highly successful PETS community event. PoPETs is published by De Gruyter Open, the world's second largest publisher of open access academic content, and part of the De Gruyter group, which has over 260 years of publishing history. PoPETs does not have article processing charges (APCs) or article submission charges.

Authors can submit papers to PoPETs four times a year, every three months on a predictable schedule. The four submission deadlines for the 2017 volume of PoPETs are in May 2016, Aug 2016, Nov 2016, and Feb 2017. Papers accepted for an issue in the 2017 volume will be presented at PETS 2017. Note that it is expected that accepted papers must be presented at PETS, however, read our statement on the US travel ban at: https://petsymposium.org/travel-ban.php.

Authors are notified of the decisions about two months after submission. In addition to accept and reject decisions, papers may receive resubmit with major revisions decisions, in which case authors are invited to revise and resubmit their article to one of the following two issues. We endeavor to assign the same reviewers to revised versions.

PoPETs also solicits submissions for Systematization of Knowledge (SoK) papers. These are papers that critically review, evaluate, and contextualize work in areas for which a body of prior literature exists, and whose contribution lies in systematizing the existing knowledge in that area. To be suitable for publication, SoK articles must provide an added value beyond a literature review, such as novel insights, identification of research gaps, or challenges to commonly held assumptions. SoK papers will follow the same review process as other submissions, and will be published in PoPETs and presented at the PETS 2017 event.

Submit papers for PoPETs 2017, Issue 4 at https://submit.petsymposium.org/2017.4/. Please see the submission guidelines below, and view our FAQ for more information about the process.

Important Dates for PETS 2017 Issue 4
======================================
All deadlines are 23:59:59 American Samoa time (UTC-11)
Paper submission deadline: February 28, 2017 (firm)
Rebuttal period: April 10 -- 12, 2017
Author notification: May 1, 2017
Camera-ready deadline for accepted papers and minor revisions (if accepted by the shepherd): June 1, 2017

Authors invited to resubmit with major revisions can submit the revised (full) paper two weeks after the stated deadline. Such papers must, however, be registered with an abstract by the usual deadline. All other papers than these major revision resubmissions must be submitted by the stated deadline, including papers submitted to and rejected from previous issues. To benefit from the two-week deadline extension, major revisions must be submitted to one of the two issues following the decision. Major revisions submitted to later issues are treated as new submissions, due by the regular deadline and possibly assigned to new reviewers.

Suggested topics include but are not restricted to:
===================================================
Behavioural targeting
Building and deploying privacy-enhancing systems
Crowdsourcing for privacy
Cryptographic tools for privacy
Data protection technologies
Differential privacy
Economics of privacy and game-theoretical approaches to privacy
Empirical studies of privacy in real-world systems
Forensics and privacy
Human factors, usability and user-centered design for PETs
Information leakage, data correlation and generic attacks to privacy
Interdisciplinary research connecting privacy to economics, law, ethnography, psychology, medicine, biotechnology
Location and mobility privacy
Measuring and quantifying privacy
Obfuscation-based privacy
Policy languages and tools for privacy
Privacy and human rights
Privacy and machine learning
Privacy in ubiquitous computing and mobile devices
Privacy in cloud and big-data applications
Privacy in social networks and microblogging systems
Privacy-enhanced access control, authentication, and identity management
Profiling and data mining
Reliability, robustness, and abuse prevention in privacy systems
Surveillance
Systems for anonymous communications and censorship resistance
Traffic analysis
Transparency enhancing tools
Web privacy

General Chair (gc17 at petsymposium.org)
=====================================
Nick Hopper, University of Minnesota

Program Chairs/Co-Editors-in-Chief (pets17-chairs at petsymposium.org)
===================================================================
Claudia Diaz, KU Leuven
Rachel Greenstadt, Drexel University
Damon McCoy, New York University

Program Committee/Editorial Board:
==================================
Gunes Acar, KU Leuven
Sadia Afroz, UC Berkeley
William Aiello, University of British Columbia
Mashael Al-Sabah, Qatar University
Hadi Asghari, TU Delft
N. Asokan, Aalto University
Adam Aviv, United States Naval Academy
Michael Backes, Saarland University
Solon Barocas, Microsoft Research
Lujo Bauer, Carnegie Mellon University
Matt Blaze, University of Pennsylvania
Joseph Bonneau, Stanford University / EFF
Sonja Buchegger, KTH Royal Institute of Technology
Kevin Butler, University of Florida
Kelly Caine, Clemson University
Aylin Caliskan-Islam, Princeton University
Christopher Clifton, Purdue University
Jedidiah R. Crandall, University of New Mexico
George Danezis, University College London
Anupam Datta, Carnegie Mellon University
Emiliano De Cristofaro, University College London
Rinku Dewri, University of Denver
Roger Dingledine, The Tor Project
Orr Dunkelman, University of Haifa
Serge Egelman, University of California, Berkeley
Tariq Elahi, KU Leuven
Giulia Fanti, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
David Fifield, University of California, Berkeley
Simone Fischer-Hübner, Karlstad University
Bryan Ford, EPFL
Vaibhav Garg, VISA
Ian Goldberg, University of Waterloo
Thomas Groß, Newcastle University
Jens Grossklags, Penn State
Seda Gurses, KU Leuven
Marit Hansen, Independent Centre for Privacy Protection Schleswig-Holstein
Ryan Henry, Indiana University Bloomington
Raquel Hill, Indiana University Bloomington
Jaap-Henk Hoepman, Radboud University Nijmegen
Yan Huang, Indiana University Bloomington
Rob Jansen, U.S. Naval Research Laboratory
Aaron Johnson, U.S. Naval Research Laboratory
Apu Kapadia, Indiana University Bloomington
Jonathan Katz, University of Maryland
Shehar Bano Khattak, University College London
Aggelos Kiayias, University of Edinburgh
Bart Knijnenburg, Clemson University
Markulf Kohlweiss, Microsoft Research
Yoshi Kohno, University of Washington
Albert Kwon, MIT
Susan Landau, Worcester Polytechnic Institute
Peeter Laud, Cybernetica
Adam Lee, University of Pittsburgh
Boon Thau Loo, University of Pennsylvania
Marc Liberatore, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
Aleecia McDonald, Stanford University
Prateek Mittal, Princeton University
Payman Mohassel, Yahoo!/Calgary
Steven Murdoch, University College London
Steven Myers, Indiana University Bloomington
Arvind Narayanan, Princeton University
Muhammad Naveed, University of Southern California
Shirin Nilizadeh, UCSB
Guevara Noubir, Northeastern University
Vern Paxson, University of California, Berkeley
Adrian Perrig, ETHZ
Rob Reeder, Google
Alfredo Rial, University of Luxembourg
Thomas Roessler, Google
Keith Ross, New York University
Ahmad-Reza Sadeghi, Technische University Darmstadt
Reihaneh Safavi-Naini, University of Calgary
Hovav Schacham, UCSD
Stuart Schechter, Microsoft Research
Martin Schmiedeckre, SBA Research
Peter Schwabe, Radboud University Nijmegen
Mohamed Shehab, University of North Carolina at Charlotte
Reza Shokri, Cornell Tech
Thomas Shrimpton, University of Florida
Jessica Staddon, NC State University
Thorsten Strufe, TU Dresden
Carmela Troncoso, IMDEA Software Institute
Michael Tschantz, University of California, Berkeley
Kami Vaniea, University of Edinburgh
Eugene Vasserman, Kansas State University
Michael Waidner, Technische University Darmstadt
Tao Wang, Hong Kong University of Science and Technology
Tara Whalen, Google
Philipp Winter, Princeton University
Joss Wright, Oxford Internet Institute

Publicity Chairs (publicity17 at petsymposium.org)
Tariq Elahi, KU Leuven
Kat Hanna

Publications Chair (publication17 at petsymposium.org)
Marc Juarez, KU Leuven

Video Chair (video17 at petsymposium.org)
Aaron Johnson, U.S. Naval Research Laboratory

Submission Guidelines
=====================
Papers not following these instructions risk being rejected without consideration of their merits! For full details of submission guidelines please refer to: https://petsymposium.org/authors.php#submission-guidelines.

Submitted papers must be at most 15 pages excluding bibliography and appendices and 20 pages total in De Gruyter Open format (LaTeX template). PC members are not required to read the appendices, which should only be used to provide additional supporting information.

Unlike journals that publish extended versions of conference papers, PoPETs seeks to publish original, previously unpublished work. 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. 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.

Anonymization of Submissions
============================
All submitted papers will be judged based on their quality and relevance through double-blind reviewing, where the identities of the authors are withheld from the reviewers. As an author, you are required to make a good-faith effort to preserve the anonymity of your submission, while at the same time allowing the reader to fully grasp the context of related past work, including your own. It is recognized that, at times, information regarding the identities of authors may become public outside the submission process (e.g., if a pre-print is published as a technical report or on a pre-print server) – the PC will ignore this external information. Minimally, please take the following steps when preparing your submission:

-Remove the names and affiliations of authors from the title page.
-Remove acknowledgment of identifying names and funding sources.
-Use care in referring to related work, particularly your own. Do not omit references to provide anonymity, as this leaves the reviewer unable to grasp the context. Instead, reference your past work in the third person, just as you would any other piece of related work by another author.

Security Proofs
===============
Some papers require lengthy security proofs to support the technical validity of the contribution. These papers should indicate this in the body of the paper and include the proof in the appendix. The acceptance or rejection notification for these papers may be delayed to allow for the proof to be reviewed, meaning that the paper may appear in the issue following the one to which it was submitted. A paper submitted to the February deadline may or may not be reviewed in time for the paper to be presented at that year’s symposium. If this occurs the paper will be published in Issue 1 of the following year and presented at that year’s symposium.

Ethics
======
Papers describing experiments with users or user data (e.g., network traffic, passwords, social network information), should follow the basic principles of ethical research, e.g., beneficence (maximizing the benefits to an individual or to society while minimizing harm to the individual), minimal risk (appropriateness of the risk versus benefit ratio), voluntary consent, respect for privacy, and limited deception. Authors are encouraged to include a subsection on Ethical Principles if human subjects research is conducted, and such a discussion may be required if deemed necessary during the review process. This section should include a justification of the ethics of the work and information about whether the work was submitted to an external ethics panel such as an IRB. Research that is deemed to not have met adequate ethical standards may be rejected on those grounds. Authors are encouraged to contact PC chairs before submitting to clarify any doubts.

Copyright
=========
Accepted papers will be published as an open access journal by De Gruyter Open, the world's second largest publisher of open access academic content, and part of the De Gruyter group, which has over 260 years of publishing history. Authors retain copyright of their work. Papers will be published under an open access policy using a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs license.

Best Student Paper Award
========================
The Andreas Pfitzmann PETS 2017 Best Student Paper Award will be selected at PETS 2017. Papers written solely or primarily by a student who is presenting the work at PETS 2017 are eligible for the award.

Submission
==========
Papers must be submitted via the PETS 2017 submission server. The URL for Issue 4 is: https://submit.petsymposium.org/2017.4/.

HotPETs
=======
As with the last several years, part of the symposium will be devoted to HotPETs — the "hottest," most exciting research ideas still in a formative state. Further information will be published on the PETS 2017 website soon.





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