Archive for July, 2009

Oakland 2010 Call for Papers

Friday, July 10th, 2009

The Call for Papers for the 2010 IEEE Symposium on Security and Privacy is now available: oakland10.cs.virginia.edu/cfp.html.

The first three deadlines are:

Workshop proposals due: Friday, 21 August 2009
Research papers due: Wednesday, 18 November 2009
Systematization of Knowledge papers due: Tuesday, 24 November

To Facebook or not to Facebook

Saturday, July 4th, 2009

The Examiner has an article on Facebook privacy issues: To Facebook or not to Facebook, 29 June 2009.

The second approach is even scarier, a feature of Facebook which allows outside developers to create small programs called “applications” for members to do things like playing poker, getting daily horoscopes, and sending each other virtual fantasies. With the younger set, the latter must cause parents a lot of consternation over their kids. Word is there are about 24,000 applications that have been built by 400,000 developers.

And here’s the kicker. Once these developers have your personal data, there is nothing Facebook can do. Adrienne Felt of the University of Virginia investigated the procedure in her thesis and found out that 90 out of 150 of Facebook’s most popular applications (that’s 60 percent) have unnecessary access to your private information.