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Keynotes
| Dr. Jaap-Henk Hoepman |
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| Jaap-Henk Hoepman is senior scientist computer security, privacy and
identity management at TNO (the Dutch Organisation for Applied
Scientific Research) and associate professor at the Radboud University
Nijmegen, the Netherlands.
His research into information security and cryptographic protocols is
inspired by practical problems. He focusses on the design of secure and
privacy friendly protocols for the Internet of Things. Apart from that
he studies privacy and identity management. He speaks on these topics at
national and international congresses and publishes papers in
(inter)national journals. He also appears in the media as security
expert, and writes about his research in the popular press. He is
actively involved in the public debate concerning security and privacy
in our society.
In his free time he enjoys composing music, designing graphics, cooking
and practicing Okinawan Goju Ryu karate-do.
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Mobile Identity Management
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Identity management consists of the processes and all underlying
technologies for the creation, management, and usage of digital
identities. Business rely on identity management systems to simplify the
management of access rights to their systems and services for both their
employees and their customers.
Users may benefit from identity management to simplify logging in to
websites and computer systems (single sign-on), as well as streamlining
management of their personal information and preferences (user centricity).
Current systems for identity management only partially achieve these
goals, and still suffer from several security, privacy and usability
issues. We will discuss how personal mobile devices (like mobile phones
and PDA's) can be used to overcome this 'identity crisis', to increase
the security, privacy and usability of identity management systems.
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| Dr. Moti Yung |
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| Dr. Moti Yung is a Research Scientist at Google, and an Adjunct Senior Research Faculty at the Computer Science Department, Columbia University.
Before that he was a member of IBM Research, was a consultant to leading companies and governments, was with Certco and with RSA Laboratories as
well. His main research interests are in the areas of Security,
Cryptography and Privacy where he has been working on numerous scientific
aspects as well as industrial solutions, for over 25 years. In 2010 he
delivered the annual IACR's Distiguished Lecture in Cryptography. |
From Protecting a System to Protecting the Global Ecosystem |
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This talk will describe some of the security and privacy issues facing a provider of global Internet services over the complex multi-component, and evolving computing and communicating infrastructure. As the environment becomes global, including the Internet, wireless services, multimedia services, etc., the old models of dealing with security need revision, and privacy becomes an important issue as well. In this talk he will cover some core areas and demonstrate the issues via concrete problems and solutions.
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| Prof. dr. Ronald E. Leenes |
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| Dr. Ronald Leenes is full professor in regulation by technology at TILT, the Tilburg Institute for Law, Technology, and Society (Tilburg University). His primary research interests are privacy and identity management, ID fraud, biometrics and Online Dispute Resolution.
Leenes (1964) studied Public Administration and Public Policy at the University of Twente. He received his PhD for a study on hard cases in law and Artificial Intelligence and Law from the same university.
Ronald was work package leader on socio-cultural aspects of privacy-enhancing IDM in the EU FP6 PRIME project. He was work package leader for access control in social software in the FP7 PrimeLife project and is work package on legal requirements within the FP7 ENDORSE project. He has contributed to and edited various deliverables for the EU FP6 Network of Excellence 'Future of IDentity in the Information Society' (FIDIS). He has published extensively on privacy in online applications, including Second Life and Social Network Sites.
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Who needs Facebook anyway: privacy & sociality in Social Network Sites
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Social networks pose a plethora of privacy issues that are reasonably well known and understood. Many issues boil down to the same problem: information makes it to the wrong audience. This problem is inherent to the design and business model of the current social network sites. How to cope with this?
Two approaches seem obvious: address user behaviour and/or address the architecture of social network sites.
In this presentation I will argue that the options for changing users' behaviour are limited by highlighting some of the social dynamics of SNS. Next I will focus on three areas of privacy issues: those caused by individual SNS users, those used by the SNS platform providers and those caused by the non subscribers. I will show how these issues are addressed within the EU FP7 project PrimeLife in the Clique prototype.
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