Hello everyone,
Just a reminder that the deadline for submitting your papers to the
CyberSafety workshop is approaching quickly (Jan 15, 2017).
Best,
Srijan Kumar
University of Maryland, College Park
On Mon, Dec 12, 2016 at 1:44 PM, Srijan Kumar <srijankedia(a)gmail.com>
wrote:
CyberSafety 2017 Call for Papers
The Second International Workshop on Computational Methods for CyberSafety
Co-located with WWW 2017 (April 3-7, 2017 at Perth, Australia)
The theme of cybersafety is an important emerging research topic on the
Internet that manifests itself daily as users navigate the Web and
networked applications. Examples of cybersafety issues include
cyberbullying, cyberthreats, recruiting minors via Internet services for
nefarious purposes, using deceptive means to dupe vulnerable populations,
exhibiting misbehaving behaviors such as using profanity or flashing in
online video chats, spreading rumors or hate speech via WWW services, and
many others. These issues have a direct negative impact on the social,
psychological and in some cases physical well-being of users. An important
characteristic of these issues is that they fall in a grey legal area,
where perpetrators may claim freedom of speech or rights to free expression
despite causing harm.
We invite submissions of research on computational methods for addressing
cybersafety. Topics of interest include but are not limited to the
following:
-
Human-computer interaction issues surrounding cybersafety
-
Data mining and machine learning approaches for cybersafety
-
Social science aspects of cybersafety
-
Cyberbullying
-
Cyberthreats, coercion, and predation
-
Hate speech
-
Social media vandalism
-
Misbehaving users in online video chat services
-
Trolls in chat rooms, discussion boards, and other social media
-
Deception to shape opinion, such as fake news, fake reviews
-
Deceptive techniques targeted at vulnerable populations such as the
elderly and K-12 minors
-
Bad actors in social media
-
Online exposure of inappropriate material to minors
-
Education and promotion of safe spaces
-
Interface design to improve cybersafety
-
Remedies for preventing or thwarting cybersafety issues
-
Grooming and sexual predation
-
Radicalization via social media
Paper Submission
Authors are invited to submit papers of 4-8 pages in length. Papers
should be submitted electronically in PDF format, using the ACM SIG
Proceedings format <http://www.acm.org/publications/proceedings-template>
(
http://www.acm.org/publications/proceedings-template), with a font size
no smaller than 9pt. The formatted manuscript should be submitted via email
to cybersafety2017(a)gmail.com.
All submissions will be peer-reviewed. Accepted papers will be published
in the companion proceedings of the WWW conference and the ACM digital
library.
Important Dates
January 15, 2017: Paper submission deadline
January 31, 2017: Notification of acceptance
February 14, 2017: Camera-ready deadline
Program Committee Co-Chairs
Homa Hosseinmardi, Danaher Labs, USA
Qin Lv, University of Colorado Boulder, USA
Program Committee
Richard Han, University of Colorado Boulder, USA
Emiliano De Cristofaro, University College London, UK
Francesca Spezzano, Boise State University, Boise, USA
Gianluca Stringhini, University College, London, UK
Emilio Ferrara, University of Southern California, USA
Keith W. Ross, New York University, USA
April Edwards, Ursinus College, Collegeville, USA
Haewoon Kwak, Scientist, Qatar Computing Research Institute, Qatar
Michal Ptaszynski, Kitami Institute of Technology
<http://www.kitami-it.ac.jp/old/eng/index.html>, Kitami, Japan
Publicity Chair
Srijan Kumar, University of Maryland, USA
Organizing Committee
Shivakant Mishra, University of Colorado Boulder, USA
Jeremy Blackburn, Telefonica Research, Spain
Bert Huang, Virginia Tech, USA