Fwd: [ias-opportunities] Fwd: Call for papers cybersafety@oii
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From: Gene Spafford <spaf@cerias.purdue.edu> Date: January 19, 2005 9:06:22 AM EST To: ias-opportunities@cerias.purdue.edu Subject: [ias-opportunities] Fwd: Call for papers Reply-To: Gene Spafford <spaf@cerias.purdue.edu>
Subject: Call for papers Date: Wed, 19 Jan 2005 09:00:19 -0500 Thread-Topic: Call for papers Thread-Index: AcT+L0uW/nSasDEsRNK9LHHROlFvPw== From: "Kisselburgh, Lorraine Gayle" <lorraine@purdue.edu> To: <spaf@cerias.purdue.edu>
FYI: (see: http://www.oii.ox.ac.uk/research/?rq=cybersafety/callforpapers)
Oxford Internet Institute (OII)
Cybersafety
Call for Papers
Safety and Security in a Networked World: Balancing Cyber-Rights and Responsibilities
Date: 8-10 September 2005 Location: Saïd Business School, University of Oxford. Attendance: The registration process for this event will open in the spring. The Oxford Internet Institute (OII) is organising a major conference, in collaboration with the University of Auckland, NetSafe (the New Zealand government backed Internet Safety Group), EURIM and others, to address the value choices and conflicts surrounding cybersafety in a converging world. The conference will feature leading international authorities from government, industry, NGOs and academia, including the computer sciences, humanities, law and the social sciences. It will be held between 8th and 10th September 2005 at the University of Oxford. At a time when reports of the apparent risks of the Internet receive ever more media coverage, the conference aims to encourage debate around the complex web of issues, assumptions and trade-offs that must be addressed if progress is to be made in improving online safety and security at a personal, national and international level. Accepting that there are no 'quick fixes' to be supplied by any one sector, organization or nation, the conference will seek to encourage dialogue between citizens, users, governments, law enforcement agencies, industry and education both by inviting participants from a wide variety of sectors to attend the conference, and in identifying fruitful areas for future co-operation in practice. Conference Themes The conference will address a wide range of topics around the central theme of improving online safety and security. Other key themes of the conference will include:
• Discussion of the value conflicts and trade-offs involved in addressing online risks. • Exploration of the legal and national differences which will shape attempts to define international standards or regulations. • Consideration of the speed of change and the implications of technological convergence. Suggested Topics:
A range of speakers from academia, government, industry, law enforcement and NGOs will be invited. In addition, the Oxford Internet Institute invites papers from policy-makers, practitioners and academics on topics that address specific aspects of online security or safety in conjunction with at least one of the other three themes outlined above. Papers with an explicitly international focus and those that have clear implications for policy and practice are especially welcomed. Possible topics might include:
• Censorship, illegal content and unwanted content • Child development, education, media literacy and the Internet • Children's use of the Internet, including access via mobile phones • Content rating and/or age verification • Cyber-terrorism • Digital identification and authentication • Efficacy of anti-spam and anti-virus measures • Implications of location-aware devices and location-based services • International enforcement of online safety and security measures • Privacy and surveillance issues • Protecting home computers and mobile phones • Protecting e-commerce and online payment • Regulation, co-regulation and self-regulation and the role of international bodies in protecting the Internet • Safety and security challenges posed by the delivery of e-government services Key dates:
Submission of abstracts: 11th March 2005 Author Notification: 15th April 2005
Submission procedure: Abstracts, along with a cover letter/e-mail listing full contact details, to be submitted electronically to cybersafety@oii.ox.ac.uk. Abstracts should be no more than 300 words. Word or pdf formats acceptable. If you would like to submit an abstract in any other format please contact ict@oii.ox.ac.uk to check compatibility. We will also have facilities for alternative presentation formats such as short video, animation, and multimedia. If proposing a presentation of this type, you may wish to send audio or visual files rather than a formal paper abstract; if doing so, please specify any unusual codecs used (e.g. Divx, WMV, AVI, MPG). If files are larger than 2MB please upload to a web-page and e-mail us the link.
jeremy hunsinger jhuns@vt.edu www.cddc.vt.edu jeremy.tmttlt.com www.tmttlt.com () ascii ribbon campaign - against html mail /\ - against microsoft attachments
Greetings all. Jeremy has sent out the conference submission site while I tried to figure out why my emails to the list were not getting through. I hope thanks to Charles Breindahl's help the problem has been solved. I wanted to add a note with a suggestion about what should be in submissions. Often people do not know what to put in an abstract. As a reviewer, I thought I'd share what I look for -- perhaps others can also add their ideas on what makes a good abstract, panel submission, etc. So, my personal view ... Submissions for the conference are more like a *proposal* than a final paper. You need to win the reviewer over by convincing them the work is important, new, groundbreaking, and doable. As a reviewer, I like to see: -- a clear description of what the paper / presentation / panel will be about -- why this work is important -- why the topic warrants all the work that goes into the final version -- what kind of paper it is -- a literature review, a report of a study, a proposal of a theory? -- the goal of the paper: e.g., to describe the state of the art in area x, to review the historical background to area x, to solve problem x by doing a study, to suggest a theoretical resolution to conflicting results, to outline a research agenda to explore issues extant in area x. -- how the goal will be accomplished, e.g., reviewing literature, asking key informants, reading archives, conducting a study -- what what will have been added to the world's stock of knowledge when you are done, why the effort will have been worthwhile -- a project of a manageable scope -- i.e., something that can be completed in the 3 months or so between acceptance and time of presentation /Caroline ---------------------------------------------------------------- Caroline Haythornthwaite (haythorn@uiuc.edu) Associate Professor Graduate School of Library and Information Science University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 501 East Daniel St., Champaign, IL, 61820 phone: 217-244-7453 fax: 217-244-3302 www.lis.uiuc.edu/~haythorn
participants (2)
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Caroline Haythornthwaite -
jeremy hunsinger