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Overview

Overview. Week 1 - August 31, September 2. About me About you Name Where are you from? What program are you in? Why are you taking this class Make a name tag. Introductions. EPP. Syllabus. http://lorrie.cranor.org/courses/fa05/ Office hours TA Books Class schedule

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Overview

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  1. Overview Week 1 - August 31, September 2

  2. About me About you Name Where are you from? What program are you in? Why are you takingthis class Make a name tag Introductions EPP

  3. Syllabus • http://lorrie.cranor.org/courses/fa05/ • Office hours • TA • Books • Class schedule • Subject to change - check web site for latest updates • Guest speakers • Research and communication skills • http://lorrie.cranor.org/courses/fa05/skills.html • Homework • Project (to be discussed in more detail Sept 2) • http://lorrie.cranor.org/courses/fa05/project.html • Course requirements and grading • Class mailing list • http://cups.cs.cmu.edu/mailman/listinfo/privacy-class

  4. Course number • Course is cross-listed as 15-508 / 17-801 / 19-608 / 95-818 • Please switch to 17-801 (especially if you are a grad student signed up for 15-508)

  5. Cheating will not be tolerated • You must do your own homework • It is acceptable to discuss the reading assignments and general approaches to solving homework problems with your classmates • It is not acceptable to discuss detailed homework answers or to copy homework answers from other students • Hopefully you already knew this….

  6. Avoiding Plagiarism

  7. Research and Communication Skills CMU Policy on Cheating and Plagiarism CMU Policy*: Plagiarism includes, but is not limited to, failure to indicate the source with quotation marks or footnotes where appropriate if any of the following are reproduced in the work submitted by a student: • A phrase, written or musical. • A graphic element. • A proof. • Specific language. • An idea derived from the work, published or unpublished, of another person. *http://www.cmu.edu/policies/documents/Cheating.html

  8. Research and Communication Skills This is serious • Consequences of plagiarism in this class range from zero credit for entire assignment to failing the course to recommendation of university disciplinary action • Publishers and professional societies have plagiarism policies too • The Internet makes it easy to plagiarize • Students are frequently cutting and pasting off the Internet without proper quotation and/or citations • Students are buying papers off the Internet • The Internet also makes it easy to catch plagiarism

  9. Research and Communication Skills Avoiding plagiarism • If you use someone’s specific words, put them in quotes and cite the source • If you use someone’s ideas expressed in your own words, cite the source • If you paraphrase, summarize in your own words, but still cite source • Don’t use same sentence structure with a few word substitutions • If you use some of the source’s words, put them in quotes • When in doubt, put it in quotes and cite the source!

  10. Research and Communication Skills Good resources on avoiding plagiarism • http://www.wisc.edu/writing/Handbook/QPA_plagiarism.html • Includes nice examples of good and bad paraphrasing • http://owl.english.purdue.edu/handouts/research/r_plagiar.html • Includes good suggestions for how to avoid accidental plagiarism in your writing • http://www.georgetown.edu/honor/plagiarism.html • http://sja.ucdavis.edu/avoid.htm

  11. Creating a Bibliography and Citing Sources

  12. Research and Communication Skills Creating a bibliography and citing sources • Do you know how to create a properly formatted bibliography? • Why is a list of URLs not a proper bibliography?

  13. Research and Communication Skills Citing sources • Whenever you take words, images, or ideas from another source you need to cite that source • Direct quotes and paraphrases • Images, photographs, tables, graphs • Ideas, measurements, computations • Also use citations as evidence to back up assertions • If you use somebody else’s words, you must quote them • Short excerpts appear in quotes • Long excerpts (3 or more lines) are introduced and then appear as indented text, often in a smaller font, single spaced • If you leave out words in the middle use … • If you leave out words at the end use …. • If you substitute or add words, put them in square brackets [] • If you add italics say [emphasis added] • Failure to cite sources = plagiarism

  14. Research and Communication Skills Paraphrasing • Usually paraphrasing ideas is preferable to quoting unless • Exact wording is important • You are quoting famous words • You are critiquing or comparing specific words rather than ideas • The original words say what you want to say very well and succinctly • Usually paraphrasing lets you convey an idea more succinctly because you can focus on the part of the idea most relevant to your paper • If you end up using some of the original words in your paraphrase, use quotes around those words

  15. Research and Communication Skills Forms of citation • Full bibliographic citation inline • Typically used on a slide • Footnote or endnote • Used in legal writing, many books, some conferences and journals • Inline short citation with bibliography, references cited section, or reference list • Used by most technical conferences and journals, some books, most dissertations

  16. Research and Communication Skills Citations in text • Format depends on style you are using • Usually a number or author and date, sometimes a page number reference too • Citation usually goes at the end of the sentence • Privacy is not “absolute,” (Westin 1967). • Privacy is not “absolute,” [3]. • If Author is mentioned, in sentence, name does not appear in citation • Westin (1967, p. 7) claims that individuals must balance a desire for privacy with a desire to participate in society. • Multiple citations can appear together • [3, 4, 5] • (Westin 1967; Cranor 2002)

  17. Research and Communication Skills Footnotes • Used heavily in legal writing • Usually used sparingly in technical writing • Each footnote appears only once • If you reference the same source multiple times you must repeat the reference information, however you can abbreviate it on second and subsequent references and use ibid to indicate same as previous reference

  18. Research and Communication Skills Creating a bibliography • Similar rules apply to other forms of citation (footnotes, etc.) • Pick an appropriate style and use it consistently throughout your paper • Most conferences and journals have style requirements • Popular styles: Chicago/Turabian, MLA, APA, APSA (see http://lorrie.cranor.org/courses/fa05/skills.html#bib for pointers) • Complete bibliographic entry includes author, title, date, publisher, place of publication, pages, volume number, etc. • Bibliographic entries should be ordered - usually either alphabetically or in order referenced in the text

  19. Research and Communication Skills Word processing tools • Microsoft Word • Word has built in support for footnotes and endnotes • Use cross reference feature for numbered reference lists • Third party bibliographic add-ons may be useful • LaTeX • Built in support for footnotes and endnotes • Use Bibtex!

  20. Homework 1 • http://lorrie.cranor.org/courses/fa05/hw1.html • Due September 7

  21. Course Preview Tour Privacy in words and pictures

  22. Semester Project

  23. Overview • Individual or small group (up to 5 students) • Pick your own project or one that I suggest • All projects have final paper, presentation, and poster as deliverable • Some projects may have other deliverables such as software, user interface designs, etc.

  24. Project schedule • August 31/September 2 - Project assignment discussed in class
 • September 19 - Project brainstorming due (2 points)
 • October 3 - One-paragraph project description due (3 points)
 • October 17 - Project proposal due (15 points)
 • November 14 - Draft paper due (5 points)
 • December 9, 3pm - Final paper due (60 points)
 • December 5, 7,? - Project presentations in class (10 points) • December 14 - Poster fair (5 points)

  25. Suggested projects • http://lorrie.cranor.org/courses/fa05/project.html • Projects can be turned into a thesis or published paper • Sign up for thesis research or independent study next semester • Last year projects in this class resulted in 5 papers submitted for publication (3 have been accepted, 2 are still under review) • The Real ID Act: Fixing Identity Documents with Duct Tape. To appear in I/S: A Journal of Law and Policy for the Information Society, Fall/Winter 2005. • Counter-Forensic Privacy Tools: A Forensic Evaluation. Under review. • Peripheral Privacy Notifications for Wireless Networks. In Proceedings of the 2005 Workshop on Privacy in the Electronic Society, 7 November 2005, Alexandria, VA. • Privacy in India: Attitudes and Awareness. In Proceedings of the 2005 Workshop on Privacy Enhancing Technologies (PET2005), 30 May - 1 June 2005, Dubrovnik, Croatia. • PANAMA: Privacy Assured Name-Addressable Messaging Architecture For Unlinkable Instant Message Conversations. Under review. • One of the papers was also an INI thesis

  26. Brainstorm What are you interested in? What would you like to learn more about? What topics might be relevant to your thesis work? What topics might be relevant to your future career? Select a small number of candidate topics (Sept 19) Read How much information seems to be available? Is this topic over done? What open questions are there? Do you still find this topic interesting? Do you have the skills necessary to pursue this topic? Focus (October 3 - one paragraph description) Select a topic Define a focused research question Read some more Conduct a “literature review” Adjust your topic as needed Write a project proposal (October 17) Research and Communication Skills Selecting a research topic

  27. What does privacy mean to you?

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