"Smart Contracts, Blockchain, and Rules" Track

"Smart Contracts, Blockchain, and Rules" Track
http://2016.ruleml.org/calls/blockchain-enabled-smart-contracts-and-rules

at the 10th International Web Rule Symposium, (RuleML-2016)
http://2016.ruleml.org
Stony Brook, NY, July 6-9, 2016.

Smart Contracts have emerged as means to digitalize and
(semi-)automatically enforce (legal) contracts, backed by blockchain
technologies --- a set of recent technologies that appeared the first time
in the context of the cryptocurrencies bitcoin, but are now being
transitioned to different domains. Smart contracts are envisioned to
essentially be user-defined programs that specify rules governing
transactions, and that are enforced by a distributed network of peers.
Traditional rule technologies have a high relevance in the context of Smart
Contracts - they can be used for specification, reasoning, and enforcement
of smart contracts, among others. At the same time, Smart Contracts
represent a potential new application area of traditional rule
technologies. The goal of this track is to identify opportunities and
challenges for use of rule technologies in Smart Contracts, eventually
shaping a better understanding of what Smart Contracts actually are and
what they could be used for. During the last years the International Web
Rule Symposium (RuleML) has been a leading international conference on
research, applications, languages and standards for rule technologies. Due
to the relevance of rules in Smart Contracts, it is natural that the
emerging area of Smart Contracts finds RuleML a relevant venue for
dissemination and that RuleML uses this opportunity to expand the
applicability of rule technologies.

Topics (not limited to):

Design of Smart Contracts
Rule-based specification of Smart Contracts
Declarative process specification in Smart Contracts
Formalization of Smart Contracts
Protocols for Smart Contracts
Reasoning about Smart Contracts
Distribution, sharing and publication of Smart Contracts
Deployment and enforcement of Smart Contracts
Programming models for Smart Contracts
Smart Contracts and Blockchains
Smart Contracts and legal rules and regulations
Legal systems, Blockchains, and Smart Contracts
Identity and reputation management in Smart Contracts
Rules and blockchains
Smart Contracts Applications and Use Cases
Smart Contracts technologies (e.g. Ethereum, Eris, Codius, etc.)
RuleML and Smart Contracts

Submission

Papers must be original contributions written in English and must be
submitted at http://www.easychair.org/conferences/?conf=ruleml2016 (please
enter the track name as the first line in the keywords section) as:

Full Papers (15 pages in the proceedings)
Short Papers (8 pages in the proceedings)
Please upload all submissions in LNCS format. To ensure high quality,
submitted papers will be carefully peer-reviewed by 3 PC members based on
originality, significance, technical soundness, and clarity of exposition.
Selected papers will be published in book form in the Springer Lecture
Notes in Computer Science (LNCS) series. The RuleML2016 special tracks will
be published in the same book. Short papers may contain 1 extra page
maximum for which there is a charge of US$200, while for long papers you
are allowed 2 extra pages maximum for EACH of which there is a charge of
US$200. A selection of the best papers from all tracks will be invited to
be revised and extended for the post-conference publication in a Special
Issue of TPLP (Theory and Practice of Logic Programming).

RuleML main track and special tracks dates:

* Register Title and Abstract in Easychair: March 11, 2016
* Paper Submission: March 18, 2016
* Author Notification: May 4, 2016
* Camera Ready: May 18, 2016
* Conference: 6-9 July, 2016

Organizers

Sudhir Agarwal, Stanford University, USA
Alex Oberhauser, Sigimera, USA
Dumitru Roman, SINTEF / University of Oslo, Norway

Program Committee (confirmed):

Sudhir Agarwal, Stanford University, USA
Andrea Bracciali, University of Stirling, UK
Primavera De'Filippi, Harvard Berkman Center & COALA, USA
Margaret Hagan, Stanford University, USA
Steffen Lamparter, Siemens, Germany
Andrew Miller, University of Maryland, USA
Sergey Nazarov, SmartContract, USA
Alex Norta, Tallinn University of Technology, Estonia
Alex Oberhauser, Sigimera, USA
Monica Palmirani, University of Bologna, Italy
Gareth W. Peters, University College London, UK
Dumitru Roman, SINTEF / University of Oslo, Norway
Giovanni Sarto, European University Institute of Florence, CIRSFID -
University of Bologna, Italy
Melanie Swan, Singularity University, USA
Emilio Tuosto, University of Leicester, UK

Received on Friday, 12 February 2016 20:28:23 UTC