default search action
36th SP 2015: San Jose, CA, USA - Workshops
- 2015 IEEE Symposium on Security and Privacy Workshops, SPW 2015, San Jose, CA, USA, May 21-22, 2015. IEEE Computer Society 2015, ISBN 978-1-4799-9933-0
2nd International Workshop on Genome Privacy and Security (GenoPri'15)
Cryptographic Approaches to Privacy
- Wenjie Lu, Yoshiji Yamada, Jun Sakuma:
Efficient Secure Outsourcing of Genome-Wide Association Studies. 3-6 - David A. duVerle, Shohei Kawasaki, Yoshiji Yamada, Jun Sakuma, Koji Tsuda:
Privacy-Preserving Statistical Analysis by Exact Logistic Regression. 7-16
Miscellaneous
- Ji Young Chun, Hyelim Lee, Ji Won Yoon:
Passing Go with DNA Sequencing: Delivering Messages in a Covert Transgenic Channel. 17-26 - Ludovic Barman, Mohammed Taha Elgraini, Jean Louis Raisaro, Jean-Pierre Hubaux, Erman Ayday:
Privacy Threats and Practical Solutions for Genetic Risk Tests. 27-31
Measuring Genome Privacy
- Sahel Shariati Samani, Zhicong Huang, Erman Ayday, Mark J. Elliot, Jacques Fellay, Jean-Pierre Hubaux, Zoltán Kutalik:
Quantifying Genomic Privacy via Inference Attack with High-Order SNV Correlations. 32-40 - Sean Simmons, Bonnie Berger:
One Size Doesn't Fit All: Measuring Individual Privacy in Aggregate Genomic Data. 41-49 - Isabel Wagner:
Genomic Privacy Metrics: A Systematic Comparison. 50-59
Policy, Law, and Genomic Privacy
- Andelka M. Phillips:
Genomic Privacy and Direct-to-Consumer Genetics: Big Consumer Genetic Data - What's in that Contract? 60-64 - Mark Phillips, Bartha M. Knoppers, Yann Joly:
Seeking a "Race to the Top" in Genomic Cloud Privacy? 65-69
Second Workshop on Language-Theoretic Security (LangSec'15)
First Session: Papers
- Vijay D'Silva, Mathias Payer, Dawn Xiaodong Song:
The Correctness-Security Gap in Compiler Optimization. 73-87 - Kerry N. Wood, Richard E. Harang:
Grammatical Inference and Language Frameworks for LANGSEC. 88-98 - Adrian Dabrowski, Isao Echizen, Edgar R. Weippl:
Error-Correcting Codes as Source for Decoding Ambiguity. 99-105 - Jacob I. Torrey, Mark P. Bridgman:
Verification State-Space Reduction through Restricted Parsing Environments. 106-116
Second Session: Research Reports
- W. Michael Petullo, Joseph Suh:
On the Generality and Convenience of Etypes. 117-124 - Erik Poll, Joeri de Ruiter, Aleksy Schubert:
Protocol State Machines and Session Languages: Specification, implementation, and Security Flaws. 125-133 - Lars Hermerschmidt, Stephan Kugelmann, Bernhard Rumpe:
Towards More Security in Data Exchange: Defining Unparsers with Context-Sensitive Encoders for Context-Free Grammars. 134-141 - Geoffroy Couprie:
Nom, A Byte oriented, streaming, Zero copy, Parser Combinators Library in Rust. 142-148
2015 International Workshop on Privacy Engineering (IWPE'15)
Systematizing Privacy Engineering Goals
- Nicolás Notario, Alberto Crespo, Yod Samuel Martín, José M. del Álamo, Daniel Le Métayer, Thibaud Antignac, Antonio Kung, Inga Kroener, David Wright:
PRIPARE: Integrating Privacy Best Practices into a Privacy Engineering Methodology. 151-158 - Marit Hansen, Meiko Jensen, Martin Rost:
Protection Goals for Privacy Engineering. 159-166 - Rainer Hoerbe, Walter Hötzendorfer:
Privacy by Design in Federated Identity Management. 167-174
Technologies for User-Management of Privacy
- Eve Maler:
Extending the Power of Consent with User-Managed Access: A Standard Architecture for Asynchronous, Centralizable, Internet-Scalable Consent. 175-179 - Guy Zyskind, Oz Nathan, Alex Pentland:
Decentralizing Privacy: Using Blockchain to Protect Personal Data. 180-184
Surveillance, Privacy and Infrastructure
- Nick Doty:
Reviewing for Privacy in Internet and Web Standard-Setting. 185-192 - Gina Fisk, Calvin Ardi, Neale Pickett, John S. Heidemann, Mike Fisk, Christos Papadopoulos:
Privacy Principles for Sharing Cyber Security Data. 193-197
Evaluating Engineering Methods for PETs
- Jan Henrik Ziegeldorf, Jan Metzke, Martin Henze, Klaus Wehrle:
Choose Wisely: A Comparison of Secure Two-Party Computation Frameworks. 198-205 - Fatemeh Shirazi, Matthias Goehring, Claudia Díaz:
Tor Experimentation Tools. 206-213
manage site settings
To protect your privacy, all features that rely on external API calls from your browser are turned off by default. You need to opt-in for them to become active. All settings here will be stored as cookies with your web browser. For more information see our F.A.Q.