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Anonymity - Introduction. Fall 2009 TUR 2303 M 5 (11:45-12:35), R 5-6 (11:45-1:40) Prof. Newman, instructor CSE-E346 352-392-1488 Office Hours (tentative): MTW 2-3pm nemo@cise.ufl.edu - subject: Anon. Outline. Course Outline – what is this subject? Projects and papers Policies.
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Anonymity - Introduction • Fall 2009 • TUR 2303 • M 5 (11:45-12:35), R 5-6 (11:45-1:40) • Prof. Newman, instructor • CSE-E346 • 352-392-1488 • Office Hours (tentative): MTW 2-3pm • nemo@cise.ufl.edu - subject: Anon ...
Outline • Course Outline – what is this subject? • Projects and papers • Policies
Course Outline • Definiting anonymity • Needs for anonymity • Obtaining anonymity • Attacking anonymity • Measuring anonymity • Applications of anonymity • Project presentations
Projects and Papers • Each student will pursue some area of research within anonymity • A short (3-page) paper on this area is due mid-term • A project proposal is also due mid-term • Final projects will be demonstrated and presented in class over the last few weeks • This is a major part of your grade! Take it seriously and do not procrastinate!
Policies • If you arrive late, please be quiet, and silence cell phones • Prepare for class and bring pencil & paper • Engage in the class while you are here – your participation is important not only to your grade but to the others in the class • Please do discuss this class, assignments, readings, etc. outside of class • Do give attribution to others' contributions to the work you submit – cite references or acknowledge help
Grading • 40% exams and quizzes • There will be short quizzes on reading assignments at the start of some classes. I will drop the lowest score, so arrive on time and prepared. • You will be questioned on others' presentations • 30% project • This includes paper and project. Rubric to follow. • 30% paticipation and presentation • Be here (completely!), ask questions, participate in exercises, make relevant comments, prepare a clear and informative presentation.
Questions? Any questions on class policies?
Reading • Untraceable electronic mail, return addresses, and digital pseudonyms by David Chaum.In Communications of the ACM 24(2), February 1981. • See class web page for electronic links to papers.