ATC-09 Workshops - Call For Papers
Paper Submission Deadline | 15 February 2009 |
Paper Status Notification | 25 March 2009 |
Camera-ready Due: | 24 April 2009 |
Call for Workshop Proposals is now closed, please refer to here for more information!
Workshops list:
- MANS09 (International symposium on Multidiscipline-inspired Autonomous Networks and Systems)
Website: http://jinlab.human.waseda.ac.jp/mans2009/
Organizer:- Yufeng Wang, Nanjing University of Posts and Telecommunications, China
- Qun Jin, Waseda University, Japan
Description: more info - CPSC2009 (International Workshop on Cyber Physical and Social Computing)
Website: http://malab.cis.k.hosei.ac.jp/cpsc/
Organizer:- Benxiong Huang, Huazhong University of Sci. & Tech., China
- Furong Wang, Huazhong University of Sci. & Tech., China
Description: more info - CTC-2009 (International workshop on Cybercrime and Trustworthy Computing)
Website: http://www.cybercrime.com.au/ctc09/
Organizer:- Paul A. Watters, University of Ballarat
- Josef Pieprzyk, Macquarie University
Description: more info
Workshops Description:
- MANS09 (International symposium on Multidiscipline-inspired Autonomous Networks and Systems)
http://jinlab.human.waseda.ac.jp/mans2009/
Nowadays, computing and network systems, such as peer-to-peer, wireless ad hoc, sensor networks, and general overlay networks, are heterogeneous, dynamic and distributed environments managed by multiple administrative authorities, shared by users with different and competing interests, or even autonomously provided by independent and rational users. The distinguished feature in autonomous networks and systems is that each player determines its behaviors autonomously. "Design for choice" is the fundamental principle of autonomous networks and systems.
As computing and network systems gradually become the fundamental infrastructure of our information society, many multidisciplinary research topics emerge to reflect the features of our economics and society. As we know, in the research and application of autonomous networks and systems, only technical viewpoint is far away from sufficient, which has been proved by the dilemma of Internet QoS research and applications. More important, multidisciplinary perspectives and approaches will shed new light on various related issues in autonomous networks and systems, and foster new applications. For example, a social network over wireless ad hoc network can provide proximity based social computing, and may be one of killer applications in wireless ad hoc networks. In this direction, biology, psychology, economics (e.g., game theory), social network, and many other research fields can provide many helpful hints for autonomous networks and systems research. - CPSC2009 (International Workshop on Cyber Physical and Social Computing)
http://malab.cis.k.hosei.ac.jp/cpsc/
The International Workshop on Cyber Physical and Social Computing (CPSC 2009) is an international forum for researchers to exchange information regarding advancements in the state of the art and practice of cyber physical and social computing, as well as to identify the emerging research topics and define the future. The technical program of CPSC 2009 will consist of invited talks, paper presentations, and panel discussions. CPSC 2009 will be held in Brisbane, Australia, on July 7-10, 2009, in conjunction with The 6th International Conference on Autonomic and Trusted Computing (ATC 2009) - CTC-2009 (International workshop on Cybercrime and Trustworthy Computing)
http://www.cybercrime.com.au/ctc09/
Cybercrime continues to be a growth industry, assisted by a combination of technical factors, such as insecure hardware and software platforms, and psychological factors, such as user error or naivety. The objective of this workshop is to bring together two distinct groups to encourage further collaboration - those who are working on researching cybercrime activity, such as phishing and malware, and those who are working on technical countermeasures.
The scope of the workshop is reasonably narrow, to ensure a complementary match between capability and need. Papers should either be empirically or rationally based explorations of problems in cybercrime, or propose solutions and/or countermeasures to the most pressing cybercrimes.