Hello everyone, A reminder that the student paper contest for TPRC 49 <http://www.tprcweb.com/tprc49-cfp> is still open. More from the website below. take care, Dhanaraj ** *Student Paper Contest * TPRC offers cash prizes of $1000, $500, and $300 for outstanding student papers. Students must submit a complete paper, not an abstract. The prize is open to all graduate and law students enrolled in the 2021-2022 school year. Co-authors may be other students meeting the same criteria. Papers co-authored with faculty or other non-students are not eligible. Papers should not exceed 15,000 words, including references. Students are encouraged to have their submissions endorsed by a faculty member at the student’s institution. To receive an award, students must present a full paper at the conference. Award winners receive complimentary conference registration and travel reimbursement up to $500. Fourth through sixth place submissions are given opportunity to present during the Poster Session. Full paper due: April 30 Notice of decisions: June 15 Submissions - https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=tprc49 Topics areas for this call: * Broadband: availability, wireline and wireless technologies, deployment funding policy, adoption, measurement, and regulation. * Spectrum policy: 5G/6G, spectrum management, auctions, ITU IMT-2020/Network 2030 plans, spectrum sharing, governance, satellite. * Digital Economy: competition, antitrust, platform regulation, content moderation, Section 230, net neutrality. * COVID: impacts to the ICT sector and technological changes to the economy, privacy. * Privacy & Security: data protection, surveillance, encryption, lawful access, regulation, enforcement, user behavior, advertising. * International dimensions of ICT policy: trade, geopolitics, localization, security, regulation, Europe, China, internet governance. * Emerging technologies like Artificial Intelligence, machine learning, blockchain, and cryptocurrency, their regulation, standards, social/economic implications. * ICT and Gender, race, ethnicity, diversity, justice, and inclusion. * Elections and Technology: media, censorship, Constitutional questions, litigation. * Intellectual Property analyses (copyright, trademarks, patents etc.) of the items above.