This call is well-aligned with some of the recent discussions:

Allow me also to point yu to the USEC call for papers for 2015:
http://www.internetsociety.org/events/ndss-symposium-2015/usec-workshop-call-papers

USEC Workshop - Call for Papers

NDSS Workshop on Usable Security 2015

Co-located with Network and Distributed System Security (NDSS) Symposium
2015

Workshop date: February 8, 2015


Important Dates
Submission deadline: November 24, 11:59pm PST, 2014
Notification: December 18, 2014
Camera ready: January 15, 2015
Workshop: February 8, 2015


Program Committee Chair
Jens Grossklags, The Pennsylvania State University


Overview

Many aspects of information security combine technical and human factors.
If a highly secure system is unusable, users will try to circumvent the
system or move entirely to less secure but more usable systems. Problems
with usability are a major contributor to many high-profile security
failures today.

However, usable security is not well-aligned with traditional usability for
three reasons. First, security is rarely the desired goal of the
individual. In fact, security is usually orthogonal and often in opposition
to the actual goal. Second, security information is about risk and threats.
Such communication is most often unwelcome. Increasing unwelcome
interaction is not a goal of usable design. Third, since individuals must
trust their machines to implement their desired tasks, risk communication
itself may undermine the value of the networked interaction. For the
individual, discrete technical problems are all understood under the rubric
of online security (e.g., privacy from third parties use of personally
identifiable information, malware). A broader conception of both security
and usability is therefore needed for usable security.

The Workshop on Usable Security invites submissions on all aspects of human
factors and usability in the context of security and privacy. USEC 2015
aims to bring together researchers already engaged in this
interdisciplinary effort with other computer science researchers in areas
such as visualization, artificial intelligence and theoretical computer
science as well as researchers from other domains such as economics or
psychology.

We particularly encourage collaborative research from authors in multiple
fields. Topics include, but are not limited to:

   - Evaluation of usability issues of existing security and privacy models
   or technology
   - Design and evaluation of new security and privacy models or technology
   - Impact of organizational policy or procurement decisions
   - Lessons learned from designing, deploying, managing or evaluating
   security and privacy technologies
   - Foundations of usable security and privacy
   - Methodology for usable security and privacy research
   - Ethical, psychological, sociological and economic aspects of security
   and privacy technologies

We further encourage submissions that contribute to the research
community's knowledge base:

   - Reports of replicating previously published studies and experiments
   - Reports of failed usable security studies or experiments, with the
   focus on the lessons learned from such experience.

It is the aim of USEC to contribute to an increase of the scientific
quality of usable security and privacy research. To this end, we encourage
the use of replication studies to validate research findings. This
important and often very insightful branch of research is sorely
underrepresented in usable security and privacy research to date. Papers in
these categories should be clearly marked as such and will not be judged
against regular submissions on novelty. Rather, they will be judged based
on scientific quality and value to the community.



Prof. L. Jean Camp
http://www.ljean.com
Human-Centered Security
http://usablesecurity.net/
Economics of Security
http://www.infosecon.net/
Congressional Fellow
http://www.ieeeusa.org/policy/govfel/congfel.asp
-- 
Liberationtech is public & archives are searchable on Google. Violations of 
list guidelines will get you moderated: 
https://mailman.stanford.edu/mailman/listinfo/liberationtech. Unsubscribe, 
change to digest, or change password by emailing moderator at 
compa...@stanford.edu.

Reply via email to