Conferences

A conference is a gathering of important people who singly can do nothing
but together can decide that nothing can be done.
-- Fred Allen
Conference Description Conference date Submission date
ZA-WWW2004
Johannesburg, South Africa
6th Annual Conference on World Wide Web Applications
6TH ANNUAL CONFERENCE ON WORLD WIDE WEB APPLICATIONS (ZA-WWW2004)
Presented by
Department of Information Studies Rand Afrikaans University
and
School of Information Technology Technikon Witwatersrand
Guidelines for poster presentations

A poster presentation is an ideal medium to present new ideas and activities with regard to recent developments in a particular discipline.

A heading including a title, author(s), and institution to be placed at the top in letters no less than thirty millimetres high. The body of the poster to be self-explanatory and can include figures, tables, graphs, maps or photographs displayed in a well organized and coherent sequence from top to bottom.

The poster display should include a statement of the problem, objectives of the research or project, the methodology used to solve the problem or implement the program, the major findings or outcomes and their significance, and conclusions.


September 01-03, 2004

August 20, 2004

Passed Conferences
DRM 2003
Washington DC, USA
ACM Workshop on Digital Rights Management
Increasingly the Internet is used for the distribution of digital goods, including digital versions of books, articles, music, and images. The Internet facilitates rapid distribution of digital goods (either legally or illegally), as well as enabling new business models for publishers. The ACM Workshop on Digital Rights Management addresses technical problems faced by copyright owners (who seek to protect their rights) and by end users (who seek to protect their privacy and to preserve their rights of access to works they have purchased).

October 27, 2003 to Unknown 00, 0000

July 15, 2003
GD 2003
Perugia, Italy
International Symposium on Graph Drawing
Graph Drawing is concerned with the geometric representation of graphs and networks and is motivated by those applications where it is crucial to visualize structural information as graphs. Bridging the gap between theoretical advances and implemented solutions is an important aspect of the conference. Indeed, advances in graph drawing are a key factor in such technological areas as Web computing, e-commerce, VLSI circuit design, information systems, software engineering, bioinformatics, networking, and cybergeography. Researchers and practitioners working on theoretical and practical aspects of graph drawing are welcome to participate.

September 21-24, 2003

May 31, 2003
NETSAFE 2003
Auckland, New Zealand
NetSafe Conference 2003
The New Zealand Police, the University of Auckland and the Internet Safety Group hosted the NetSafe II: Society, Safety & the Internet conference in July, 2003. This important international conference was held over four days from July 9-12, 2003 in the beautiful harbourside city of Auckland, New Zealand.

July 09-12, 2003

Unknown
SPIE 2003
Santa Clara, California
Special session on Steganalysis
Submission of papers focused but not limited to the following issues: 1. Detection of hidden messages in all image types, attacks, passive and active warden scenario 2. Theoretical aspects of steganalysis, steganographic capacity 3. Security provided by current steganographic programs, evaluation, attacks 4. Identification of steganographic programs from stego-images 5. Steganalytic software and automatic web-crawlers for message detection on the Internet

January 20-24, 2003

June 24, 2002
POPL 2003
New Orleans, USA
Symposium on Principles of Programming Languages
POPL is a forum for the discussion of fundamental principles and important innovations in the design, definition, analysis, and implementation of programming languages, programming systems, and programming abstractions. Submissions on a diversity of topics are sought and both practical and theoretical papers are welcome. POPL '03 is not limited to topics discussed in previous symposia or to formal approaches. In fact, papers that point out new directions are encouraged.

January 15-17, 2003

July 19, 2002
ACM Multimedia 2002
Juan-les-Pins, France
Multimedia and Security Workshop
Areas of interest for this workshop include (but are not limited to) the following topics: Robust and fragile watermarking techniques, watermarking protocols Watermarking attacks, quality evaluations and benchmarks Conditional access Content-based digital signatures Legal aspects Security in JPEG2000, MPEG-4, MPEG- 7 or MPEG21 Biometrics and multimedia secuirty Video and audio crypting New applications and security issues

December 06, 2002 to Unknown 00, 0000

August 19, 2002
IHW 2002
Noordwijkerhout, Netherlands
Information Hiding Workshop
Many researchers are interested in hiding information or, conversely, in preventing others from doing so. Although the protection of digital intellectual property has recently motivated most of the research in this area, there are many other applications of increasing interest to both the academic and business communities. Interested parties are invited to submit novel papers on research and practice which are related to the above areas of interest. We want a balanced program and seek submissions on topics such as anonymous communication, anonymous online transactions, privacy, and covert/subliminal communications, along with our usual quality steganography, watermarking and fingerprinting submissions.

October 07-09, 2002

February 05, 2002
ACSC 2003
Adelaide, South Australia
Australasian Computer Science Conference
We welcome papers describing original contributions in all fields of Computer Science and Software Engineering research and education.

February 04-07, 2002

September 06, 2002


© 2001, 2002, 2003 Jasvir Nagra <jas.auckland.ac.nz>
First authored: July 6, 2001
Last munged: August 11, 2004