02. Aug 2010 - 06. Aug 2010
Privacy and Identity Management for Life
Karlstad University
SE-65188 Karlstad, Sweden
Phone: +46 5 4700 1000
Fax: +46 5 4700 1460
Email: information@kau.se
Link to the organizer
URL of event
Privacy and Identity Management for Life
Karlstad University
SE-65188 Karlstad, Sweden
Phone: +46 5 4700 1000
Fax: +46 5 4700 1460
Email: information@kau.se
Link to the organizer
URL of event
Conference / Convention
Type of Event
Education, Culture & Sports
Policy Field of Event
Registration required
Limitation
Contact
Clarion Grand Hotel
Helsingborg
Sweden
Helsingborg
Sweden
Location of event
After the success of the 2009 PrimeLife/IFIP Summer School, the European project PrimeLife and IFIP (International Federation for Information Processing, Working Groups 9.2, 9.6/11.7 11.4, 11.6) will continue their joint cooperation. This year they will hold an International Summer School on the topic of Privacy and Identity Management for Emerging Internet Applications throughout a Person's Lifetime.
Emerging Internet Applications, such as Web 2.0 applications and cloud computing, increasingly pose privacy dilemmas. When they communicate over the Internet, individuals leave trails of personal data which may be stored for many years to come. In recent years, social network sites, where users tend to disclose very intimate personal details about their personal, social, and professional lives, have caused serious privacy concerns. The collaborative character of the Internet enables anyone to compose services and distribute information. Due to the low costs and technical advances of storage technologies, masses of personal data can easily be stored. Once disclosed, this data may be retained forever and be removed with difficulty. It has become hard for individuals to manage and control the release and use of information that concerns them. They may particularly find it difficult to eliminate outdated or unwanted personal information.
These developments raise substantial new challenges for personal privacy at the technical, social, ethical, regulatory, and legal levels:
* How can privacy be protected in emerging Internet applications such as collaborative scenarios and virtual communities?
* What frameworks and tools could be used to gain, regain and maintain informational self-determination and lifelong privacy?
Emerging Internet Applications, such as Web 2.0 applications and cloud computing, increasingly pose privacy dilemmas. When they communicate over the Internet, individuals leave trails of personal data which may be stored for many years to come. In recent years, social network sites, where users tend to disclose very intimate personal details about their personal, social, and professional lives, have caused serious privacy concerns. The collaborative character of the Internet enables anyone to compose services and distribute information. Due to the low costs and technical advances of storage technologies, masses of personal data can easily be stored. Once disclosed, this data may be retained forever and be removed with difficulty. It has become hard for individuals to manage and control the release and use of information that concerns them. They may particularly find it difficult to eliminate outdated or unwanted personal information.
These developments raise substantial new challenges for personal privacy at the technical, social, ethical, regulatory, and legal levels:
* How can privacy be protected in emerging Internet applications such as collaborative scenarios and virtual communities?
* What frameworks and tools could be used to gain, regain and maintain informational self-determination and lifelong privacy?
Infos
Bibi van der Berg (Tilburg University), Jan Camenisch (IBM Research), Herbert Leitold (TU Graz), Jan Möller (German Ministry of the Interior), Gregory Neven (IBM Research), Andreas Pfitzmann (TU Dresden), Bernd Carsten Stahl (ETICA project), Angela Sasse (UCL), Claire Vishik (Intel), Alma Whitten (Google).
People



