Fwd: [TCCC-ANNOUNCE] Call for Papers: Decentralized IoT Systems and Security (DISS 2020) workshop with NDSS (Feb. 23, 2020, San Diego, CA, USA)
-------- Weitergeleitete Nachricht -------- Betreff: [TCCC-ANNOUNCE] Call for Papers: Decentralized IoT Systems and Security (DISS 2020) workshop with NDSS (Feb. 23, 2020, San Diego, CA, USA) Datum: Mon, 4 Nov 2019 22:57:47 +0200 Von: George C. Polyzos polyzos@AUEB.GR Antwort an: George C. Polyzos polyzos@AUEB.GR An: tccc-announce@COMSOC.ORG
Call for Papers Decentralized IoT Systems and Security A workshop in conjunction with the 2020 Network and Distributed System Security Symposium (NDSS) (https://www.ndss-symposium.org/) organized by the Internet Society (https://www.internetsociety.org/) February 23, 2020 — San Diego, CA, USA An open full-day workshop with extensive discussion. It is the 3rd in a series with NDSS (the program and papers for the previous ones are available online: https://www.ndss-symposium.org/ndss2018/diss-workshop-programme/ and https://www.ndss-symposium.org/ndss-program/workshop-on-decentralised-iot-sy...). Revised papers will be published as post-workshop proceedings by the Internet Society. Technical summary The success of the Internet of Things (IoT) depends significantly on solving related decentralization, security and privacy challenges. A key aspect is decentralization, as many if not most of the IoT use cases include big data collection from large-scale and heterogeneous device deployments. Furthermore, decentralized security may help to overcome privacy concerns and scalability bottlenecks, both of which become increasingly serious in large-scale deployments, such as smart cities, Industry 4.0, or next generation business platforms. A decentralized approach to IoT systems and security brings forth many opportunities but also challenges, such as operating with constrained devices, with intermittent network connectivity, state synchronization, and trust management — these and additional challenges listed below would be the scope of the proposed workshop. Following the spirit of NDSS, the goal of this workshop is to bring together academia and industry, researchers and practitioners, to analyze and discuss the potential and limits of decentralization in secure IoT systems. The proposed topics include the following (but relevant papers will not be rejected for not falling under these topics): - Secure interoperability across IoT ecosystems - Security and privacy trade-offs related to IoT scalability and decentralization - Securing the Web of Things - Secure service provisioning and software upgrading for large-scale IoT - Self-awareness and self-adaptation in decentralized IoT - Usable and context-aware security for decentralized IoT - Peer-to-Peer (P2P) security and privacy in IoT - Blockchains and other Distributed Ledger Technologies for secure and trusted interaction in the IoT and edge systems - Security and privacy in multi-tiered edge systems (“fog computing”) - Smart Contracts for the IoT, including formal verification of smart contracts - Decentralized access control and rights management - Decentralized trust management and governance - Authentication and access management at the IoT edge - IoT security and privacy architectures for 5G Networks - IoT Key Management Protocols - Trust, Security, Safety, and Privacy in IoT-enabled tactile and critical infrastructures - Scalable programmable network infrastructures for supporting secure IoT applications - NFV, Management & Orchestration for distributed, scalable and secure IoT architectures - Decentralized (edge & backend) IoT analytics and embedded intelligence - Application of concepts from outside of the IoT to decentralized IoT security - Security & Privacy for Federated/Distributed Machine Learning with Adversarial Agents - Attestation in the large scale decentralized IoT Submission Instructions The workshop will accept papers of between four to six pages in length for publication in post-workshop proceedings. Proceedings will be published by the Internet Society with the revised papers based on the workshop discussions and reviewer comments. Papers shall be submitted for review in print-ready form using the NDSS paper template and the review will be single blind. For a paper to be published, at least one of the authors must attend the entire workshop, the paper must be revised based on the discussion at the workshop, and the revised paper must be submitted in time for the publication deadline. As previously, submissions and reviews will be handled by EasyChair. PC members have been invited and will be announced soon. *** Important dates *** Abstract Submission: December 13, 2019 Paper Submissions Due: December 20, 2019 Decision Notice to Authors: January 17, 2020 Camera-ready paper: March 13, 2020 Organizers: - Farinaz Koushanfar, UCSD, USA (fkoushanfar@eng.ucsd.edu) - Pekka Nikander, Aalto University, FI (mailto:pekka.nikander@aalto.fi) - George C. Polyzos, AUEB, GR (mailto:polyzos@acm.org) - Vasilios A. Siris, AUEB, GR (mailto:vsiris@aueb.gr) TPC co-Chairs: Pekka Nikander and Vasilios A. Siris Call for Papers updates will be available: - on the NDSS website: https://www.ndss-symposium.org/ndss2020/cfp-diss-workshop/ - on: https://mm.aueb.gr/DISS-2020 Prof. George C. Polyzos, Director Mobile Multimedia Laboratory, Department of Informatics School of Information Sciences and Technology Athens University of Economics and Business 47A Evelpidon, GR-11362 Athens Tel.: +30 2108203650, assistant: +30 2108203646 Email: polyzos@aueb.gr, polyzos@acm.org http://mm.aueb.gr/~polyzos, http://niovi.aueb.gr/~gcp
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participants (1)
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Lars Wolf