Wednesday, January 28, 2015

NetEcon 2015

Patrick Loiseau, Adam Wierman, and I are co-chairing the 2015 NetEcon workshop, to be held in conjunction with EC and Sigmetrics at this year's FCRC in Portland. You should stop by if you are attending any of the FCRC conferences, (and submit a paper). If you haven't been to a previous iteration, this workshop brings together people interested in game theory from both the networking and theory/AI communities, so is a great place to present work that might be of interest to both communities, or to pick up problems that are interesting from a different community than yours.

We've got a great set of invited speakers: R. Srikant, Ricky Vohra, and Eva Tardos.

So start thinking about what you want to submit -- you've only got about 3 months.
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Call For Papers:

         NetEcon 2015: The 10th Workshop on the Economics of Networks, 
Systems and Computation
         At FCRC 2015, in conjunction with ACM EC and ACM SIGMETRICS
         Monday, June 15, 2015 (Portland, Oregon, USA)

http://netecon.eurecom.fr/NetEcon2015/


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INVITED SPEAKERS

     * *R. Srikant*, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
     * *Rakesh V. Vohra*, University of Pennsylvania
     * *Eva Tardos*, Cornell University


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CALL FOR PAPERS

Today's communication networks and networked systems are highly complex 
and heterogeneous, and are often owned by multiple profit-making 
entities. For new technologies or infrastructure designs to be adopted, 
they must not be only based on sound engineering performance 
considerations but also present the right economic incentives. Recent 
changes in regulations of the telecommunication industry make such 
economic considerations even more urgent. For instance, concerns such as 
network neutrality have a significant impact on the evolution of 
communication networks.

At the same time, communication networks and networked systems support 
increasing economic activity based on applications and services such as 
cloud computing, social networks, and peer-to-peer networks. These 
applications pose new challenges such as the development of good pricing 
and incentive mechanisms to promote effective system-wide behavior. In 
relation to these applications, security and privacy also require 
consideration of economic aspects to be fully understood.

The aim of NetEcon is to foster discussions on the application of 
economic and game-theoretic models and principles to address challenges 
in the development of networks and network-based applications and 
services. NetEcon was established in 2006 (succeeding to the P2PECON, 
IBC and PINS workshops) and merged with the W-PIN workshop in 2013. We 
invite submission of extended abstracts describing original research on 
theoretical/methodological contributions or on applications to cases of 
interest. It is our hope that NetEcon will serve as a feeder workshop, 
i.e., that expanded, polished versions of extended abstracts will appear 
later in major conference proceedings and refereed journals of relevant 
research communities.

Topics of interest include (but are not limited to):

     * Pricing of resources in communication networks, grids, and cloud 
computing
     * Pricing of information goods and services; copyright issues, 
effect of network externalities (e.g., in social network)
     * Economic issues in universal broadband access; economics of 
interconnection and peering
     * Effects of market structure and regulations (e.g., network 
neutrality)
     * Economics of network security and privacy; valuation of personal data
     * Auctions with applications to networks: spectrum auctions, 
auction-based marketplaces for network and cloud resources
     * Incentive mechanisms for networks: peer-to-peer systems, clouds, 
wireless networks, spam prevention, security
     * Methods for engineering incentives and disincentives (e.g., 
reputation, trust, control, accountability, anonymity)
     * Empirical studies of strategic behavior (or the lack thereof) in 
existing, deployed systems
     * Design of incentive-aware network architectures and protocols
     * Game-theoretic models and techniques for network economics: large 
games, learning, mechanism design, interaction of game theory and 
information theory or queuing theory, information exchange, diffusion, 
dynamics of cooperation and network formation, trades in social and 
economic networks
     * Algorithmic mechanism design for network systems
     * Critiques of existing models and solution concepts, as well as 
proposals of better models and solution concepts
     * Studies of open collaboration, peer production, crowdsourcing, 
and human computation.


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SUBMISSION FORMATTING GUIDELINES AND PROCEEDINGS

Submissions must be in the form of extended abstracts of 3-4 pages, 
including all figures, tables, references, appendices, etc. They must be 
formatted according to the standard alternate ACM PER double column 
format using letter paper. You are encouraged to use the ACM 
sig-alternate-per latex template 
(http://www.sigmetrics.org/sig-alternate-per.cls).

Accepted extended abstracts will be published in a special issue of ACM 
Performance Evaluation Review (PER) and will be available online through 
ACM portal digital library. Authors of accepted abstracts grant ACM 
permission to publish them in print and digital formats.

Note that authors retain the copyright of their work published in ACM 
PER, with freedom to submit it elsewhere. Yet, authors for whom 
publication of a 3-4 pages extended abstract in the NetEcon 2015 
proceedings would preclude later publication of an expanded version in 
the relevant venue may elect to contribute only a one-page abstract of 
their submitted extended abstract to the NetEcon 2015 proceedings. Such 
an abstract should include the URL of a working paper or preprint that 
contains the main results presented at the NetEcon workshop. Authors 
will make this decision after receiving a notice of acceptance.

If the number of excellent submissions is larger than we have space to 
allot presentations for, some authors will be offered the opportunity to 
present their work during a poster session.


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COMMITTES

PC CHAIRS
     Patrick Loiseau (EURECOM, France)
     Aaron Roth (UPenn, USA)
     Adam Wierman (Caltech, USA)

WEBMASTER
     Michela Chessa (EURECOM, France)

TECHNICAL PROGRAM COMMITTEE
     Matthew Andrews (Alcatel-Lucent Bell Labs, USA)
     Itai Ashlagi (MIT, USA)
     Moshe Babaioff (Microsoft Research, Israel)
     Tamer BaÅŸar (University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, USA)
     Bobby Bhattarcharjee (University of Maryland, USA)
     Rainer Böhme (WWU Münster, Germany)
     Kostas Bimpikis (Stanford University, USA)
     Eilyan Bitar (Cornell University, USA)
     Augustin Chaintreau (Columbia University, USA)
     Michela Chessa (EURECOM, France)
     kc claffy (CAIDA / UC San Diego, USA)
     Costas Courcoubetis (SUTD, Singapore and AUEB, Greece)
     Amogh Dhamdhere (CAIDA / UC San Diego, USA)
     Constantine Dovrolis (GeorgiaTech, USA)
     Rachid Elazouzi (University of Avignon, France)
     Sergey Gorinsky (Institute IMDEA Networks, Spain)
     Jens Grossklags (The Pennsylvania State University, USA)
     Roch Guerin (Washington University in St. Louis, USA)
     Nidhi Hegde (Alcatel-Lucent Bell Labs, France)
     Ekram Hossain (University of Manitoba, Canada)
     Stratis Ioannidis (Yahoo! labs, USA)
     Krisnamurthy Iyer (Cornell University, USA)
     Rahul Jain (USC, USA)
     Ian Kash (Microsoft Research, UK)
     David Kempe (USC, USA)
     Peter Key (Microsoft Research, UK)
     Nikolaos Laoutaris (Telefonica Research, Spain)
     Dave Levin (University of Maryland, USA)
     Patrick Loiseau (EURECOM, France) -- co-chair
     Brendan Lucier (Microsoft Research, USA)
     John C. S. Lui (The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong)
     Patrick Maillé (Institut Mines-Telecom / Telecom Bretagne, France)
     Jason Marden (University of Colorado, Boulder, USA)
     Ravi Mazumdar (University of Waterloo, Canada)
     Jeonghoon Mo (Yonsei University, South Korea)
     John Musacchio (UC Santa Cruz, USA)
     Andrew Odlyzko (University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, USA)
     Aaron Roth (UPenn, USA) -- co-chair
     Galina Schwartz (UC Berkeley, USA)
     Paul G. Spirakis (University of Liverpool, UK and CTI, Greece)
     Nicolás Stier Moses (Facebook Data Science, USA)
     Vijay Subramanian (University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, USA)
     John N. Tsitsiklis (MIT, USA)
     Bruno Tuffin (Inria, France)
     Adrian Vetta (McGill University, Canada)
     Steven Weber (Drexel University, USA)
     Adam Wierman (Caltech, USA) -- co-chair


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IMPORTANT DATES

     * Wednesday April 22, 2015, 11:59pm PST: Submission deadline (firm)
     * Wednesday May 13, 2015: Notification to authors
     * Monday June 8, 2015: Final version for the workshop's website due
     * Monday June 15, 2015: Workshop in Portland
     * Monday July 13, 2015: Final version for the ACM PER proceedings due


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ADDITIONAL INFORMATION

For more information, please contact the organizers or visit the 
workshop website: http://netecon.eurecom.fr/NetEcon2015/.

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