Preface Welcome to the first workshop on Personal Semantic Data (PSD2010), part of the 17th International Conference on Knowledge Engineering and Knowledge Management (EKAW2010)! Personal information management (PIM) is an active area of interest for re- search and industry alike. While our time and energy resources remain constant, the amount of information that needs our attention grows exponentially with the advances in communications and information sharing tools. The tools that we use to manage our personal information have evolved over time from the pen and paper day planners to their numerous digital replace- ments. The desktop used to be at the centre of the users’ PIM universe, con- taining their contacts, emails, events, appointments, and to-do lists. However, as the amount of stored information and the number of applications available to handle it grew, desktop data became harder and harder to manage, as it was locked-in by applications and stored in application-specific formats. The Seman- tic Desktop is the result of applying Semantic Web technologies to the desktop, to better interlink personal data and make it easier to search, browse and or- ganise. It lifted the data from the application silos and non-standard formats to a standard RDF-based representation, described using commonly agreed-upon ontologies. Nowadays, the transition is made more and more towards mobile devices, the majority of which have Internet connectivity. This has lead to an increasing share of information, like calendar and email, being stored on users’ various devices or in the cloud, because of hardware limitations like storage and processing power. Also, applications such as Chrome OS, Google Documents, or MS Office Live en- able users to store personal documents in the Cloud, while many social relations are managed through social Web sites like Facebook, MySpace or Bebo. In par- allel, the Semantic Web has gained considerable momentum, especially through initiatives like Linking Open Data, that have generated a vast amount of struc- tured data available on the Web. Furthermore, projects like FOAF and SIOC have enabled the publication of machine-readable information about people and their social interactions. As more online services and applications become available to users and gain popularity, the boundaries between the desktop and the Web become less dis- cernible. The desktop is no longer the single access point to personal information, but one of many personal information sources. Consequently, personal informa- tion is becoming more fragmented across multiple devices, requiring extra effort to synchronize, duplicate, search and browse. We believe that semantic technolo- gies can improve significantly the user’s experience and relieve some of the stress associated with managing disparate information. Personal semantic data is scattered over several media, and while seman- tic technologies are already successfully deployed on the Web as well as on the desktop, data integration is not always straightforward. The transition from the desktop to a distributed system for PIM raises new challenges, which represent the subject of this workshop. Related research is being conducted in several disciplines like human-computer interaction, privacy and security, information extraction and matching. Through this workshop we would like to enable cross- domain collaborations to further advance the use of technologies from the Se- mantic Web and the Web of Data for Personal Information Management, and to explore and discuss approaches for improving PIM through the use of vast amounts of (semantic) information available online. In turn, this workshop is of interest to researchers in the areas of PIM, Linked Data, Web Sciences, Social Collaboration, and more. We wish to thank all the authors of submitted papers and to the members of the program committee. October 2010 The organizers Organization Committee Laura Drăgan : Affiliation: Digital Enterprise Research Institute (DERI), National Univer- sity of Ireland, Galway Email: laura.dragan@deri.org Web page: http://www.deri.ie/about/team/member/laura_dragan/ Bernhard Schandl : Affiliation: Department of Distributed and Multimedia Systems, University of Vienna, Austria Email: bernhard.schandl@univie.ac.at Web page: http://www.cs.univie.ac.at/bernhard.schandl Charlie Abela : Affiliation: Department of Intelligent Computer Systems (ICS), University of Malta, Malta Email: charlie.abela@um.edu.mt Web page: http://staff.um.edu.mt/cabe2/ Tudor Groza : Affiliation: Digital Enterprise Research Institute (DERI), National Univer- sity of Ireland, Galway Email: tudor.groza@deri.org Web page: http://www.tudorgroza.org Gunnar Aastrand Grimnes : Affiliation: DFKI GmbH, Germany Email: gunnar.grimnes@dfki.de Web page: http://www.dfki.uni-kl.de/~grimnes/ Prof. Stefan Decker : Affiliation: Digital Enterprise Research Institute (DERI), National Univer- sity of Ireland, Galway Email: stefan.decker@deri.org Web page: http://www.stefandecker.org Program Committee Diego Berrueta, CTIC Foundation, Gijon, Spain Dan Brickley, FOAF Project, UK François Bry, Ludwig-Maximilian University Munich, Germany Jerome Euzenat, INRIA Grenoble Rhone-Alpes, France Fabien Gandon, INRIA Sophia-Antipolis, France Harry Halpin, University of Edinburgh, UK Nicola Henze, Leibniz University Hannover, Germany Robert Jaeschke, University of Kassel, Germany William Jones, The Information School, University of Washington, USA Malte Kiesel, DFKI GmbH, Germany Stéphane Laurière, Mandriva, France Knud Möller, Digital Enterprise Research Institute (DERI), Galway, Ireland Paola Monachesi, Utrecht University, Utrecht, The Netherlands Daniel Olmedilla, Telefonica R & D, Spain Gerald Reif, University of Zurich, Department of Informatics, Switzerland Leo Sauermann, gnowsis.com, Vienna, Austria Sven Schwarz, DFKI GmbH, Germany Chris Staff, Department of Intelligent Computer Systems, University of Malta Diman Todorov, Knowledge Engineering Systems Group, Cardiff University, UK Mischa Tuffield, Garlik, UK Claudia Wagner, TU Graz, Austria Stefan Zander, Department of Distributed and Multimedia Systems, University of Vienna, Austria Copyright remains with the authors, and permission to reproduce material printed here should be sought from them. Similarly, pursuing copyright infringe- ments, plagiarism, etc. remains the responsibility of authors. Table of Contents Keynote Making Sense of Users’ Web Activity . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 Mathieu D’Aquin Full Papers Managing Personal Information by Automatic Titling of E-mails . . . . . . . . 2 Cédric Lopez, Violaine Prince, Mathieu Roche SemChat: Extracting Personal Information from Chat Conversations . . . . 14 Keith Cortis, Charlie Abela Ad-hoc File Sharing Using Linked Data Technologies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26 Niko Popitsch, Bernhard Schandl Towards a Simple Textual Trace Based Personal Exo-Memory . . . . . . . . . . 38 Pierre Deransart Short Paper LinksTo - A Web2.0 System that Utilises Linked Data Principles to Link Related Resources Together . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 50 Owen Sacco, Matthew Montebello