General CFP
| Data Mining | Industrial Practice and Experience | Internet Monetization |
Performance, Scalability and Availability | Rich Media | Search | Security and Privacy |
| Semantic / Data Web | Social Networks and Web 2.0 | User Interfaces and Mobile Web |
|Web Engineering | WWW in Ibero-America | XML and Web Data |
| Developers Track | Panels | Posters | Tutorials | Workshops |
Internet Monetization
The Web has become as a major economic phenomenon, acting both as a conduit for traditional endeavours such as business-to-business and business-to-consumer commerce, and as an arena for specific economic activities such as Web advertising, digital payment systems, and bandwidths provisioning. The WWW track on Internet Monetization is a forum for theoretical and applied research related to web-specific economic activities. The track will be interdisciplinary in nature. Relevant topics include (but are not limited to):
- Advertising infrastructure: tools, platforms, networks, exchanges, automation, audience intelligence
- Computational advertising: sponsored search, content match, graphical ads delivery, auctions, targeting
- Digital payment systems
- Economic approaches to spam/fraud control
- Economics aspects of online reviews, reputations, and ratings
- Economics of information/digital goods
- Economics aspects of user privacy, data value, and control
- Electronic markets
- Intellectual property and digital rights management
- Internet auctions, markets, and exchanges
- Machine learning, data mining, search, auction theory, and user modeling as they relate to Internet monetization
- Monetizing digital media, user generated content, and the social web
- Monetizing the mobile Web
- Network neutrality and network pricing
- ROI framework and management tools
- User Experience Design aspects of Web Monetization mechanisms
- User behaviour analysis and web analytics for e-commerce
Paper formatting requirements are provided on the Submission page.
Track Chairs
- Andrei Broder, Yahoo! Inc, USA
- Ying Li, Microsoft, USA
Program Committee
- Deepak Agarwal (Yahoo! Research, USA)
- Eric Billingsley (Ebay, USA)
- Joan Feigenbaum (Yale University, USA)
- Rayid Ghani (Accenture Technology Labs, USA)
- Anindya Ghose (NYU, USA)
- Arpita Ghosh (Yahoo! Research, USA)
- Ashish Goel (Stanford University, USA)
- Jason Hartline (Northwestern University, USA)
- Ralf Herbrich (Microsoft Research Cambridge, UK)
- Thomas Hofmann (Google, Switzerland)
- Tao Hong (BaiDu, China)
- Geoff Hulten (Microsoft Corporation, USA)
- Joseph Konstan (University of Minnesota, USA)
- Oren Kurland (Technion, Israel)
- Sebastien Lahaie (Yahoo! Research)
- Mike Moran (IBM Research, USA)
- Moni Naor (Weizmann, Israel)
- Noam Nissan (Jerusalem/Google, Israel)
- Yan Qu (Advertising.com, USA)
- Robert Ragno (Medio, USA)
- AC Surendran (Microsoft Adlabs, USA)