Dear everyone at Wave,

from June 3rd until June 5th 2011, a second iteration of the Federated Social 
Web Conference takes place in Berlin.

We invite you to discuss the challenges faced by decentral social networks and 
make progress in building a "federated social web". The World Wide Web 
Consortium (W3C) with support from the PrimeLife EU-Research-Project are 
organizing FSW2011.

You can find more information on our website or within the attached Call for 
Participation. http://d-cent.org/fsw2011/

We would be very happy to recieve a paper or two form you context or maybe even 
an attandance. If money would be an issue causing that really no one of your 
project could make it, we will try our best.

If you have any questions, please don't hesistate to contact me.

Best Regards from Berlin,
Matthias
--
Federated Social Web - Europe // event-coordination
jabber: [email protected]


Call for Participation
Federated Social Web Europe 2011 #fsw2011

Friday to Sunday, June 3-5, 2011
Heinrich-Böll-Stiftung, Berlin


Overview

    Background
    Goals and Scope
    Workshop/Conference format
    Venue
    Deliverables
    Workshop Organization
    Chairs
    Expression of Interest
    Position papers
    Important dates
    Program committee

Background

The Web is not only hyperlinks, but also encompasses the social relationships 
that link humanity together. Driven by social networking, micro-blogging, and 
open data, this Social Web is becoming a vital mode of communication across 
wider and wider sections of the planet, with innovative and disruptive effects.

Currently the Social Web exists as a number of “closed silos” that limit their 
users to relationships with those who have accounts on the same site. If the 
Web is to remain a universal information space, the Social Web should allow 
users to communicate across the entire Web, in a similar manner to how e-mail 
and telephones allow us to communicate across diverse networks regardless of 
the particular provider.

Diverse social networking sites could federate using inter-operable standards 
to share social data like status updates. To make this vision a reality on a 
truly large-scale, more work on standardization, policy, test cases, and more 
experimentation and experience with actual deployment and code are needed.

There are also new requirements, as increasingly users must further be able to 
trust the Social Web to allow them to communicate securely with their peers and 
have their privacy respected. Both legal policy-based approaches to the 
handling of personal information related to social networking and strong 
cryptographic technology can be leveraged to improve the current state of the 
art in decentralized social network services. In the long-run, our society will 
be more and more dependent on the exchanges done via social networking 
services, so architectures and standards for the Social Web should therefore be 
designed to be robust and resilient against attack.

The workshop aims to capture, discuss and address the challenges and the 
potential of innovations in the federated social network space. The workshop 
will kick off with talks and panels on Friday June 3rd, to be followed by 
discussion of position papers about possible future standards and 
architectures. Afterwards, an open space will begin on Saturday June 4th and 
early Sunday June 5th, to enable further discussion, collaborative coding, 
development and experimentation.

Goals and Scope

This workshop intends to bring together communities building federated social 
networking code-bases with those involved in privacy and identity. It will be 
the second conference, following up on the original Federated Social Web Summit 
in Portland in 2010, but now with a focus on privacy protection in the social 
web and the cloud. As it is a W3C Workshop, it will have one day for position 
papers and discussion. To continue the tradition of the Federated Social Web 
Summit in Portland in 2010 and attract more developers, the summit will also 
have a open-space, including opportunities for collaborative coding and open 
talks, for an entire day.

Topics for discussion and position papers may include, but are not limited to:

    Showcasing interoperability and federation across different social network 
code-bases, such as the SWAT0 test-cases
    Concrete lessons learned from social networking interoperability code-bases
    Detailing privacy requirements for the Social Web and mapping these into 
concrete technical proposals and considerations.
    Analysis of attack threats and possible solutions for social networking
    Policy-based approaches to the Social Web that allow one to communicate and 
share data across specified target audiences.
    Considerations from identity management in social networking.
    Implications of cloud-based social networking on security and privacy, 
including proposals for privacy-preserving or “private” clouds.
    Improving the user experience for federated social networking
    The role of devices such as mobile, augmented reality, and phones in 
federated social networking.
    Research on user behavior and privacy in social networks.

The workshop is expected to attract a broad set of stakeholders, including 
developers, privacy and security experts, advocates, and entrepreneurs in the 
space of social web.

Workshop/Conference format
This conference uses a mix of different approaches, including

    invited talks for the introduction – on Friday June 3rd,
    presentation of position papers, to set the scene, on Saturday June 4th, and
    open space methodology to further progress coding on late Saturday June 4th 
and Sunday June 5th
    Plus, of course, plenty of room for socializing

In order to present on Saturday, the submission of a position paper by May 2nd 
is required. For sessions during the open space, a pre-announcement over the 
W3C Federated Social Networking list-serv is recommended, but not obligatory.

You do not need to be a member of W3C to participate in this workshop, but the 
total number of participants will be limited due to the constraints of the 
space. To ensure diversity, a limit might be imposed on the maximum number of 
participants per organization. We advise early registration.

There will be a marginal registration fee of 15 Euro in order for us to prevent 
possible over-subscription.  Income from this fee will help bear the costs of 
the Workshop.

Venue
The Heinrich-Böll-Stiftung is located next to Friedrichstraße in the center of 
Berlin.

Website: boell.de

Deliverables
Position papers, agenda, accepted presentations, and a report will also be 
published online. Streaming facilities are under consideration.

Workshop Organization
Workshop sessions and documents will be in English. Interpretation for German 
may be available for the talks on Friday.

Chairs
Evan Prodromou, Status.Net
Jan Schallaböck, ULD

Expression of Interest
To help the organizers plan the workshop: If you wish to participate, please as 
soon as possible send a message to fsw11-submission_ATT_perglobal.org with a 
short “expression of interest” stating:

    that a representative from your organization plans to submit a position 
paper
    how many participants you plan on sending (we suggest one or two per 
organization)
    whether or not you wish to make a presentation in the open-space part of 
the conference.

Note: Sending that expression of interest does not mean that you registered for 
the workshop. For presenting on Saturday it is still necessary to send a 
position paper (see below), which then must be considered for acceptance by the 
Program Committee. However, submitting a position paper is not required for 
participation.

Position Papers

In order to present on Saturday, the submission of a position paper by May 2nd 
is required. Those papers not retained for presentation can be contributed to 
the openspace part. Position papers must meet the following criteria:

    explains your interest in the Workshop
    aligned with the Workshop’s stated goals as outlined above.
    1 to 5 pages long
    may be linked to a demo of existing code
    formatted in (valid) HTML/XHTML, PDF, or plain text

Based on a review of all submitted position papers, the Program Committee will 
choose a small number of papers judged most appropriate for fostering 
discussion, and ask the authors of those papers to give short presentations 
about them at the workshop. After the workshop, those presentations will then 
be published on the workshop home page, along with copies of all position 
papers.

Please register with and turn in  submissions by May 2nd 2011 via 
http://www.easychair.org/conferences/?conf=fswe2011.

Important dates
25th March Call for Participation issued
2nd May Deadline for position papers
7th May Acceptance notification sent
15th May Program released
3rd – 5th June Workshop

Program committee

    José M. del Álamo – UPM
    Daniel Appelquist – Vodafone
    Yme Bosma – Hyves
    Dan Brickley – Vrije Universitat Amsterdam
    Ian Brown – Oxford Internet Institute (OII)
    Blaine Cook – British Telecom (BT)
    Fabien Gandon – INRIA
    Karsten Gerloff – Free Software Foundation Europe (FSFE)
    Harry Halpin – World Wide Web Consortium (W3C)
    Marit Hansen – Unabhängiges Landeszentrum für Datenschutz (ULD)
    Michael Hanson – Mozilla
    Matt Lee – GNU Social
    Ronald Leenes – Tilburg Institute for Law, Technology, and Society (TILT)
    Jan Lehnardt – Couchbase
    Alexander Passant – DERI
    Soeren Preibusch – University of Cambridge
    Thomas Roessler – W3C
    Markus Sabadello – Project Danube
    Jan Schallaböck – Unabhängiges Landeszentrum für Datenschutz (ULD)
    Henry Story – Apache Software Foundation
    Mischa Tuffield – Garlik
    Claudio Venezia – Telecom Italia
    Florian Walther – Blogger, Security Expert
    Rigo Wenning – W3C
    Ben Werdmuller von Elgg – Latakoo



Matthias
--
Federated Social Web - Europe // event-coordination
jabber: [email protected]

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