Post-Conference Workshops (October 8, 2010)
- Workshop Cloud Computing Security(CCSW 2010)
- Workshop on Digital Identity Management (DIM 2010)
- Workshop on Insider Threats(WIT 2010)
- Workshop on Security and Artificial Intelligence(AISec 2010)
- Workshop on Security and Privacy in Medical and Home-Care Systems (SPIMACS 2010)
The CCSW workshop aims to bring together researchers and practitioners in all security aspects of cloud-centric and outsourced computing. How exactly grid, cloud, utility computing etc will look like tomorrow is still for the markets to decide, yet one thing is certain: clouds bring with them new untested deployment and associated adversarial models and vulnerabilities. It is essential that our community becomes involved at this early stage.
This workshop will explore critical issues concerning identity management technologies for the information society. Existing solutions are not necessarily interoperable or complementary, and sometimes overlap. Thus it is critical to lay foundations for a holistic understanding of problem areas and approaches to innovative solutions. The goal of this workshop is to share the latest findings, identify key challenges, inspire debates, and foster collaboration between industries and academia towards interoperable identity service infrastructures.
The Insider Threat has been identified as a hard, but important, computer security problem. This workshop broadly calls for novel research in the defense against insider threats. Relevant research may leverage operating systems, communication networking, data mining, social networking, or theoretical techniques to inform or create systems capable of detecting malicious parties. Cross-disciplinary work is encouraged but such work should contain a significant technical computer security contribution. Research in non-traditional systems, such as smart spaces, is encouraged as well as enterprise systems. Finally, while we discourage exploits of limited scope, we solicit generalized techniques that help an inside attacker evade modern defensive techniques.
This workshop is to facilitate an exchange of ideas between these AI and Security and promote security and privacy solutions that leverage AI technologies. Topics of interest include, but are not limited to AI-informed approaches to: Spam and botnet detection, malware identification, insider threat detection, incentives in security/privacy systems, phishing, and others.
SPIMACS (pronounced spy-max) seeks to bring together the computer and social scientists that will be required to address the challenges of securing the intimate digital spaces of the most vulnerable. We invite papers which analyze the use of technologies at home, the challenges of design targeted at a population with cognitive decline, design for the disable with a focus on medical and home support when these projects have a primary or at least significant focus on privacy and security. Papers explaining the data constraints and controls on data from policy, ethical or legal perspectives are also welcome.
Last modified: 2010-04-04 21:16:08 EDT