ISTAS 2010

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Preliminary Program

Program at a Glance

Program Highlights

Program in PDF Format

Day 1

9:00 – 9:50 Registration
9:50 - 10:15 Welcome and Opening
10:15 - 11:35 Session A - A Vision for Nanotechnology: Keynote 1 and Keynote 2
11:35 - 12:35 Session B1- Regulating Emerging Technologies: 81, 40 Session B2 - Data Security: 1, 47
12:35 - 1:35 Lunch
1:35 - 2:30 Session C - ICT Implants in the European Union: Keynote 3
2:30 - 3:30 Session D1. RFID Acceptance and Privacy: 15, 57 Session D2 - ICT Collaboration: 56, 19 Session D3 - 3G mobile and Social Networking: 123, 117
3:30 - 3:50 Afternoon Tea
3:50 - 5:20 Session E1 - Positioning and RFID Technology: 44, 26, 4 Session E2 - Social Media Education: 55, 2, 29 Session E3 - Information Security and Surveillance: 109, 91, 8
5:20 - 5:30 Close
5:30 - 7:30 SSIT Australia Meeting at Unibar (with Welcome Drinks)


Day 2

8:30 - 9:00 Registration
9:00 - 10:30 Session A - Microchip Implants for Humans - the Risks and the Rewards: Keynote 4 and Keynote 5
10:30 - 10:50 Morning Tea
10:50 - 12:30 Session B1. Biometrics and RFID Implants for Patron ID: 103, 53, 126 Session B2. Digital Identity: 72, 100, 93 B3. Enterprise Software Accountability: 37, 99, 68
12:30 - 1:25 Lunch
1:25 - 2:10 Session C - Cyborgs: Keynote 6
2:10 - 3:10 Session D1. Workplace and Citizen Surveillance: 95, 96 Session D2. E-learning with Social Media: 76, 14 Session D3. Advocacy: Technology and Risk: 74, Video
3:10 - 3:30 Afternoon Tea
3:30 - 5:00 Session E1. LBS Tracking and Monitoring: 11, 41, 94 Session E2. Socially Beneficial Technology: 25, 9, 105
6:30 Official Conference Dinner Welcome Drinks and City Beach
7:00 Keynote 7 via Teleconference


Day 3

9:00 - 9:20 Registration
9:20 - 10:40 Session A - Keynote 8 and Keynote 9
10:40 - 11:00 Morning Tea
11:00 - 12:30 Session B1. Emergency Management and Social Media: 121, 48, 23 B2. Smart Phones and a critique of Privacy: 89, 13, 16 B3. Wireless Communications and Location: 90, 85, 130
12:30 - 1:30 Lunch
1:30 - 3:20 Session C1. Special Track 1 - Location Based Services for Travel and Tourism: 128, 127, 131, 133 Session C2. Special Track - Internet Filtering and Regulation in Australia: 83, 32, 33, 34
3:20 - 3:30 Afternoon Tea
3:30 - 4:30 Session D1. Internet regulation in Australia: 82, 58 Session D2. Governement Intiatives Towards Digital Identity: 92, 125
4:30 - 4:40 Close
5:00 - 7:00 SSIT BOG Meeting
3:00 - 7:30 Nanobionics Workshop on Innovation Campus

 

Papers

  • 1: Jennifer Heath. Emerging Consumers View of Secondary Uses of Medical Data
  • 2: Sophie Nichol. Emergence of Creativity in Learning via Social Technologies
  • 4: Judith Symonds and John Ayoade. The RFID Tag Pictorial Glossary Project
  • 8: Iván Pau de Cruz, Sergio Sánchez García, Celia Fernández Aller and Justo Carracedo Gallardo. Demanded requirements in a tool for detecting child pornography in P2P networks
  • 9: Greg Adamson. One hundred reasons socially beneficial technology might not work
  • 11: Hamed Ketabdar and Matti Lyra. Mobile Phones for Remote Live Activity Monitoring
  • 13: Gayle Porter. Alleviating the “Dark Side” of Smart Phone Use
  • 14: Maria Claudia Buzzi, Marina Buzzi, Barbara Leporini and Fahim Akhter. Are social networks really "open" to all?
  • 15: Stan Kurkovsky and Ewa Syta. Continuous RFID-enabled Authentication and its Privacy Implications
  • 16: Stan Kurkovsky and Ewa Syta. Digital Natives and Mobile Phones: A Survey of Practices and Attitudes about Privacy and Security
  • 19: Malik Aleem Ahmed. Equilibrium for CMC Systems’ Alteration – An Intercultural Perspective
  • 23: Mark Freeman and Alison Freeman. Bonding over bushfires: social networks in action
  • 25: Ashraf Mahfuz and Helena Grunfeld. Green IT in Bangladesh
  • 26: William Ching, Rue Jing Teh, Binghao Li and Chris Rizos. WiPos
  • 29: Eva Cheng, Stephen Davis, Ian Burnett and Christian Ritz. The Role of Experts in Social Media - Are the Tertiary Educated Engaged?
  • 32: Chris Moore. Australian Games Classification and ISP Filtering: EPIC FAIL
  • 33: Andrew Whelan. ‘Extreme’ Music and Graphic Representation Online
  • 34: Jason Wilson. Mistaken Identity: Computer Game Regulation in Australia
  • 37: Mohd Heikal Husin and Paula Swatman. Removing the Barriers to Enterprise 2.0
  • 40: Roba Abbas. Location-based Services Regulation in Australia: Establishing Research Direction
  • 41: Roba Abbas. Location-based Services: An Examination of User Attitudes and Socio-Ethical Scenarios
  • 44: Samuel Fosso Wamba and Alison Wicks. RFID Deployment and Use in the Dairy Industry: Applications, Current Issues and Future Research Directions
  • 47: Mark Burdon, Rouhshi Low and Jason Reid. If it’s Encrypted its Secure! The Viability of US State-Based Encryption Exemptions
  • 48: Rouhshi Low, Mark Burdon, Sharon Christensen, William Duncan, Paul Barnes and Ernest Foo. Protecting the Protectors: Legal Liabilities from the Use of Web 2.0 for Australian Disaster Response
  • 53: Katina Michael and M.G. Michael. The Diffusion of RFID Implants for Access Control and ePayments: A Case Study on Baja Beach Club
  • 54: Sarah Lambert. Work/life/study balance: Surprising results from a university staff and student survey inform IT planning
  • 55: Alexander Hayes, Leo Gaggl, Geoff Lubich and Craig Lubich. The Use of Wearable Point-of-View (POV) Technologies in an Educational Context
  • 56: Lucy Resnyansky. The ICTs-mediated collaboration as a system of social activity
  • 57: Shiro Uesugi, Hitoshi Okada and Toko Sasaki. The impact of personality on acceptance of privacy-sensitive technologies:  a comparative study of RFID and finger vein authentication systems
  • 58: Eloy Portillo and Pedro Costa. The role of technological acceleration in the crisis of modernity: A view by Paul Virilio
  • 65: Hendrik Opdebeeck. Technology and overcoming the vulnerabilities of human life. Orpheus as a metaphor for the ethical leader confronted with the impact of technology.
  • 68: David Wallace. Professional accountability and decision making technology
  • 73: Ava Fatah gen. Schieck and Alan Penn. Making the invisible digital space visible: Sensing and visualising the real time city
  • 72: Lucy Resnyansky. Online Identity as a Semiotic Phenomenon
  • 74: Katherine Albrecht, Microchip-Induced Tumors in Laboratory Rodents and Dogs: A Review of the Literature 1990–2006
  • 76: Melissa de Zwart, Michael Henderson, Michael Phillips and David Lindsay. Teachers, students and Facebook, what is a ‘private’ use of a social networking site?
  • 81: Lyria Bennett Moses. Regulating Beyond Nanotechnology – Do Nano-Specific Problems Require Nano-Specific Solutions?
  • 82: Hilary Davis, Michael Arnold, Martin R. Gibbs and Bjorn Nansen. Time, Technology, and the Rhythms of Daily Life
  • 83: Mark McLelland. Australia’s Proposed Internet Filtering System and its Implications for Animation, Comics and Gaming (ACG) and Slash Fan Communities
  • 85: Miquel Oliver, Johan Zuidweg and Michail Batikas. Wireless commons against the digital divide
  • 89: Michael Arnold and Greg Adamson. A Critique of Privacy
  • 90: Ahmed Al-Hmouz and Alison Freeman. Learning on Location: An Adaptive Mobile Learning Content Framework
  • 91: Peter Goldschmidt. Surveillance Monitoring and Information Assurance Work Systems
  • 92: Sergio Sánchez García, Emilia Pérez Belleboni, Ana Gomez Oliva and Justo Carracedo Gallardo. Social and Legal Implications of Digital Identity in a Multi-national Environment
  • 93: Emilia Pérez Belleboni, Sergio Sánchez García, Justo Carracedo Gallardo and Ana Gómez Oliva. Digital Identity Applied to Telematic Voting Involving European Citizens. Social and Legal
  • 94: Gordon Gow, Nuwan Waidyanatha and Vincy Pushpa Mary. Using Mobile Phones in a Real-time Biosurveillance Program: Lessons from the frontlines in Sri Lanka and India
  • 95: William Herbert. Workplace Consequences of Electronic Exhibitionism and Voyeurism
  • 96: Jeff Robbins. GPS Navigation...But What is it Doing To Us?
  • 99: jon marshall and Didar Zowghi. Software and the Social Production of Disorder
  • 100: Anna Yang, Ed Lewis and Jan Newmarch. Profiling-based digital identity management - a better way to combat fraud
  • 103: Darren Palmer, Ian Warren and Peter Miller. ID Scanners in the Night Time Economy
  • 109: Daniel Oost. A Loss of Societal Trust as a Result of the Conflicting Mix of Pessimism and Optimism within Information Security Research
  • 112: M.G. Michael. Demystifying the Number of the Beast in the Book of Revelation: Examples of Ancient Cryptology and the Interpretation of the 666 Conundrum
  • 117: Sarah Jane Fusco, Katina Michael and M.G. Michael. Using a Social Informatics Framework to Study the Effects of Location-Based Social Networking (LBSN) on Relationships between People
  • 121: Anas Aloudat and Yehia Alzoubi. Rankings of Importance of Location-Based Services Utilisation for Emergency Management
  • 123: Indrawati, San Murugesan and Murali Raman. 3G Mobile Multimedia Services (MMS) Utilization in Indonesia:  Exploratory Research
  • 125: Ping Yu. Measuring information systems success: a case study in a health care setting
  • 126: Geoff Robertson. A Citizen’s Concerns about Human Microchip Implants - “Lack of Information”
  • 127:Ulrike Gretzel. iTravel: Influence of iPhone Use on the Sensory and Social Structure of Tourist Experiences
  • 128:Sara Dolnicar and Jason Buchanan. GPS e-observation – The Next Market Research Revolution?
  • 130: Peter Hyland, Holly Tootell, Mark Freeman. The ESCAPEE Model for Community ICT Projects
  • 131: Haralambos Arvanitakis. Geosocial Networking: A Case Study on Gypsii
  • 133: Belinda Vicorovski. Location Based Social Networking for Smart Travelers: A Case Study on the Dopplr Service
Last reviewed: 25 October, 2011