Web 2.0 Security and Privacy 2012 Workshop Call for Papers


Important Dates

Paper submission deadline: March 2, 2012 (11:59pm US-PST)
Workshop acceptance notification date: March 30, 2012
Workshop date: Thursday, May 24, 2012


The submission server is located at https://w2sp-submit.cs.wisc.edu.

W2SP brings together researchers, practitioners, web programmers, policy makers, and others interested in the latest understanding and advances in the security and privacy of the web, browsers and their eco-system. We have had five years of successful W2SP workshops. This year, we will additionally invite selected papers to a special issue of the journal.

W2SP is held in conjunction with the IEEE Symposium on Security and privacy, which will take place from May 20-23, 2012, at the Westin St. Francis Hotel in San Francisco. W2SP will continue to be open-access: all papers will be made available on the workshop website, and authors will not need to forfeit their copyright.

We are seeking both short position papers (2–4 pages) and longer papers (a maximum of 10 pages). Papers must be formatted for US letter (not A4) size paper with margins of at least 3/4 inch on all sides. The text must be formatted in a two-column layout, with columns no more than 9 in. high and 3.375 in. wide. The text must be in Times font, 10-point or larger, with 12-point or larger line spacing. Authors are encouraged to use the IEEE conference proceedings templates.

The scope of W2SP 2012 includes, but is not limited to:

Any questions should be directed to the program chair: mfredrik@cs.wisc.edu.



Workshop Co-Chairs

Larry Koved (IBM Research)
Dan Wallach (Rice)

Program Chair

Matt Fredrikson (University of Wisconsin - Madison)

Program Committee

Ben Adida (Mozilla)
Adam Barth (Google)
Suresh Chari (IBM Research)
David Evans (University of Virginia)
Vinod Ganapathy (Rutgers University)
Christian Hammer (Utah State University)
Collin Jackson (Carnegie Mellon University)
Larry Koved (IBM Research)
Ben Laurie (Google)
Ben Livshits (Microsoft Research)
John C. Mitchell (Stanford University)
David Molnar (Microsoft Research)
Arvind Narayanan (Stanford University)
Charlie Reis (Google)
Kapil Singh (IBM Research)
V.N. Venkatakrishnan (University of Illinois at Chicago)
Dan Wallach (Rice University)
Helen Wang (Microsoft Research)