[AISWorld] [CFP] IEEE EDOC 2021 International Workshop on Data Leakage Protection (DLP) and Trustworthiness in Health Data

Salma Abdalla salma.hamad at mq.edu.au
Mon Aug 9 02:34:34 EDT 2021


Dear Colleagues:
>>
>> Apologies if you received multiple cross-postings of this CFP.
>>
>> Please consider submitting your latest research in Data leakage
>> protection and Trust in healthcare into the *IEEE EDOC International
>> Workshop on Data Leakage Protection (DLP) and Trustworthiness in
>> Health Data*
>>
>> Below is the brief description of the DLP-THD Workshop:
>>
>> Data leakage is the accidental or intended unauthorized transmission
>> of data from an organization to unintended recipients. Data leakage
>> threats can originate internally or externally via email, web, mobile
>> data storage devices such as USB drives and laptops. Data leakage
>> protection (DLP) is an approach to detect data leakage and/or ensure
>> end-users do not send confidential or sensitive information outside
>> of the enterprise network. These strategies may involve a combination
>> of user and security policies and security monitoring, detection, and
>> prevention tools. This DLP track of this workshop focuses on DLP
>> response mechanisms to detect data leakage, protect and prevent data
>> in all its shapes, such as text, images within an organization, on
>> the cloud, or edge, from the risk of getting leaked accidentally or
>> intentionally.
>>
>> Moreover, requirements for future healthcare data management are
>> likely to include increased volume and diversity, shared between an
>> increasingly diverse range of people (e.g. practitioners,
>> specialists, patients) and organisations (e.g. healthcare providers,
>> technology providers, and social services). Regardless of the
>> architecture used, a key enabler of interoperability is the
>> clarification of “trust”. The Trustworthiness in health data track of
>> this workshop will explore key aspects of trust, relevant trust-based
>> concepts, and suitable semantic repository technologies capable of
>> supporting a federated, community-oriented approach.
>>
>> Topics covered by the workshop include, but are not limited to:
>>
>> *Data Leakage Protection (DLP) Track:*
>>
>> o Cloud/Edge data sharing security and privacy.
>>
>> o Data identification, marking, or classification techniques.
>>
>> o Dynamic data protection techniques.
>>
>> o Big data leakage resilient methodologies.
>>
>> o Secure Bring Your Own Device (BYOD) environments.
>>
>> o Data leakage detection from Cloud, edge, fog, IoT, or Mobile
>> applications.
>>
>> o Countermeasures against data leakage in Cloud, edge, fog, IoT, and
>> Mobile applications.
>>
>> o Data leakage in medical records and images.
>>
>> o Data leakage detection mechanisms for text, images, or videos.
>>
>> o Data loss prevention and its mechanisms for cloud, edge, mobile,
>> and embedded systems.
>>
>> o Leakages of information from encrypted data.
>>
>> o Methods of remediation after data leakage incidents.
>>
>> o Methods to detect and trace the agent/device that leaked the data.
>>
>> o Forensic investigation methods for data leakage attacks.
>>
>> o Data leakage controls for unstructured or transformed data.
>>
>> o Balancing data protection and privacy preservation techniques.
>>
>> *Trustworthiness in Health Data Track:*
>>
>> o The growing list of parties that have an interest in accessing
>> health-related data
>>
>> o The fuzzy boundary between personal health data and other personal data
>>
>> o Limits of deidentification of health data and guidelines for
>> aggregating regional health data into sharable formats that are of
>> value to medical researchers
>>
>> o Working definitions of the data subject, data author, data
>> custodian, data attester, data owner, authorized user, the delegation
>> of authority, data user rights, commercial data use, etc that are
>> encountered in practice, and the question to what extent these terms
>> even make sense or can be defined in an adequate way for enforceable
>> legislation
>>
>> o All relevant aspects of trust, including the trustworthiness of
>> people and institutions that work with health data, trust in the
>> technical capability of the people and institutions that work with
>> health data, the trustworthiness of the systems tasked with storing
>> and transmitting health data, trust in the adequacy of
>> locally/globally enforceable legislation for health data governance, etc.
>>
>> o Analysis of national/regional/organizational health data governance
>> policies from perspectives that relate to trust
>>
>> *
>> *
>>
>> *Submission deadline: ***16/8/2021*.*
>>
>> For more information about the workshop and the CFP please visit the
>> below webpages:
>>
>> https://sites.google.com/view/dlp-and-thd/home/
>>
>> https://easychair.org/cfp/DLP-THD1
>>
>>
>> Looking forward to reviewing your research.
>>
>> Best Regards,
>>
>> Workshop Chairs,
>>
>> Prof.  Michael Sheng , Macquarie University
>>
>> Salma A. Hamad, Macquarie University (salma.hamad at mq.edu.au)
>>



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