Notes from conferences
I like to attend conferences. New ideas, social networks, exotic locales--it's one of the real perks of being a grad student. I try to take good conference notes, mainly because it forces me to pay attention to each and every paper, something that isn't always easy in wifi'd lecture halls. But it's also great to have the notes around as a resource. Feel free to peruse, with the (obvious) caveat that you should probably check anything I've mentioned here against the original paper.
- Notes from the fourth Workshop on the Economics of Information Security (WEIS
2005) held right here in Cambridge MA and chaired by my advisor, Jean Camp.
- Notes from the 2005 Conference on Financial Cryptograph and Data Security(FC05).
- Notes from Northeastern University's Mini-symposium on
Information Security (2004).
- Notes from the 32nd
Telecommunications Policy Research Conference (TPRC2004).
- Notes from the third Workshop on Economics and Information Security ( WEIS04 ) at the University of Minnesota, where economists and security specialist talk about incentives and policy models for improving security and privacy.
- Notes from the Stanford Law Symposium Securing Privacy in the Internet Age exploring new legal, economics and technical mechanisms and concepts to resolve information privacy and security issues.
- Notes from the Financial Cryptography 04 conference in Key West on using cryptographic tools and systems for security and privacy applications.