Laboratorio CFC

Digital4Business

Digital4Business

Learn more about Digital4Business The future of business ...

CFC e un'iniziativa editoriale per la "cittadinanza attiva"

Il Laboratorio CFC partecipa ad un'iniziativa editoriale sul ...

Il laboratorio CFC e

Il laboratorio CFC e "l'Osservatorio delle Competenze Digitali 2017"

      Il Laboratorio CFC ha partecipat ...

Survey sulla formazione in ICT Security - iniziativa congiunta dei laboratori CFC e Cybersecurity

CINI, con i suoi due laboratori nazionali CFC (Competenze di ...

Nuovo nodo del Laboratorio CFC-Università di Bari

Ottobre 2016 - Attivato un nuovo nodo del Laboratorio presso ...

Convention AICA, Milano 27 ottobre 2016

Convention AICA, Milano 27 ottobre 2016

E' online la pagina dedicata alla Convention AICA che si ter ...

Presentazione fatta al GII/GRIN 08-09-2016

Presentazione fatta da Marco Ferretti a Bologna all'Assemble ...

DIDAMATICA 2016 - UDINE 19-21 Aprile

DIDAMATICA 2016 - UDINE 19-21 Aprile

AICA dà il via alla 30° edizione di Didamatica p ...

Conversazioni su competenze e lavoro digitale

Conversazioni su competenze e lavoro digitale

  AICA, da tempo impegnata nelle qualificazioni e ce ...

September 3‐7, 2018

In conjunction with the 23rd European Symposium on Research in Computer Security

(ESORICS 2018)

The proliferation of IoT devices has led to the production of large volumes of data that can be used to characterize and potentially optimize real world processes. At the same time, the influence of edge computing is leading to more distributed architectures incorporating more autonomous elements. The flow of information is critical in such environments, but the real time, distributed nature of the system components complicates the mechanisms for protecting and controlling access to data.

In distributed collections of autonomous devices, perimeter‐based approaches to security are less effective. Security and privacy mechanisms must take a data‐centric approach to make certain that data is protected as it travels within the system. This would include: data access governance, providing mechanisms to manage data access permissions and identify sensitive data; consent/data subject rights management, enforcing privacy over shared data and allowing organizations to search, identify, segment, and amend sensitive data as necessary; and, providing platforms that help operationalize privacy processes and practices.

One promising direction for the management of complex distributed environments is to make the major elements of the system self‐describing and self‐managing. This would lead to an architecture where policy mechanisms are tightly coupled with the system elements. In such integrated architectures, we need to create new models for information assurance, providing traceability of information and allowing better provenance on information flows.

In this workshop, we aim to focus primarily on policy based mechanisms for governance of data security and privacy. PADG 2018 will consider original and unpublished research articles that propose bold steps towards addressing the challenges of data security and privacy in multi‐site, interconnected processing environments that include autonomous systems. We solicit highquality original research papers and significant work‐in‐progress papers.

Topics of interest include but are not limited to:

  • Management of Data Security, Privacy and Trust in Autonomous Systems
  • Policy Mechanisms for Security of Collaborative Systems
  • Architectures for Secure Autonomic Computing and Cyber‐infrastructures
  • Management of Data and Information Quality and Trustworthiness
  • Strategies and Algorithms for Security Impact Analysis
  • Autonomic Security Management
  • Security Analytics
  • Autonomic Generation and Evolution of Security Policies, including Access Control and Authentication Policies
  • Policy Models and Mechanisms for Safety, Security and Privacy of Cyber physical Systems

Important Dates:

  • Submission deadline: June 20, 2018
  • Notification to authors: July 25, 2018
  • Camera‐ready versions: Aug 1, 2018
  • Workshops: September 3‐7, 2018

Paper Submission: https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=padg2018 

Papers should be formatted according to the IEEE Computer Society Proceedings Manuscript

Formatting Guidelines (see link in "formatting instructions" below). Regular papers should be at most 10 pages in this format, including the bibliography and well-marked appendices.

The original settings of textwidth and textheight should be preserved.

The workshop will also accept short paper submissions of up to 6 pages in length. Short papers are for work that makes significant contributions, but that is still in progress, of smaller scale, or that can be reported briefly.

Formatting Instructions

  • 8.5" x 11" (DOC, PDF)
  • LaTex Formatting Macros

Keynote Speakers: TBA

Program Co-Chairs:

  • Seraphin B. Calo, IBM Research, Yorktown Heights, NY, USA
  • Elisa Bertino, Purdue University West Lafayette, IN, USA
  • Dinesh C. Verma, IBM Research, Yorktown Heights, NY, USA

Program Committee Members:

  • Tiziana Catarci, University of Rome, Italy
  • Supriyo Chakraborty, IBM Research, Yorktown Heights, NY, USA
  • Xiaofeng Chen, Xidian University, China
  • Richard Chow, Intel, USA
  • Bruno Crispo, KU Leuven, Belgium
  • Frederic Cuppens, Telecom Bretagne, France
  • Elena Ferrari, University of Insubria, Italy
  • Jorge Lobo, University Pompeu Fabra, Barcelona, Spain
  • Emil Lupu, Imperial College London, London SW7 2RH, UK
  • Surya Nepal, Data61, CSIRO, Australia
  • Brian Rivera, Army Research Labs, Adelphi, MD, USA
  • Giovanni Russello, University of Auckland, New Zealand
  • Vladimiro Sassone, University of Southampton, UK
  • Murat Sensoy, Ozyegin University, Istanbul, Turkey
  • Munindar Singh, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, NC, USA

Share This

S5 Box

Cini Single Sign ON

Questo sito memorizza solo cookie tecnico/funzionali. Se vuoi saperne di più vai alla sezione Cookie Policy