- From: Riccardo Scandariato <riccardo.scandariato@cs.kuleuven.be>
- Date: Tue, 09 Jun 2009 14:26:29 +0200
- To: MIDSECWORKSHOP@LISTSERV.CC.KULEUVEN.AC.BE
CALL FOR PAPERS The 2nd International Workshop on Middleware Security (MidSec 2009) Focusing on "Composing secure architectures in the Web 2.0 era" http://www.cs.kuleuven.be/conference/MidSec2009/ November 30, 2009 Urbana Champaign, Illinois, USA Co-located with the 10th ACM/IFIP/USENIX International Middleware Conference (MIDDLEWARE 2009) SCOPE AND TOPICS Modern applications are predominantly built around the distributed programming paradigm. Client-server applications, grids, peer-to-peer networks and event-based systems are examples of architectures that are used by a large share of the present software base. These paradigms expose applications to numerous, ever-growing security threats. However, many areas of security are still only partially addressed w.r.t. middleware. Examples are identity management, privacy and anonymity, accountability, application protection, and so on. While more conventional research results in the above-mentioned areas of middleware security are appreciated, this year the MidSec workshop will particularly welcome papers in the area of security measures for lightweight composition. Papers are sought after from two complementary angles: middleware platforms and software architectures. Mashup editors provide an easy-to-use facility that brings the power of software composition at the fingertips of any Internet-connected user. The mashup model is catching the enterprise world as well; it all started with situational applications and it is currently spreading further. Ready or not, here it comes. We are about to face times where application composition will be less and less rigid and hence will more and more resemble organized chaos. Enforcing sound security principles in such a muddled environment is an interesting research challenge for both the middleware and the software architecture communities. On one hand, software architectures modeling techniques must provide suitable abstractions to represent and address the above (and many other) security concerns. On the other hand, middleware platforms should support such abstractions in a natural, usable way. The topics of interest for papers include, but are not limited to: * Middleware security and privacy * Security and privacy in agent-based platforms * Context-sensitive security middleware * Security and privacy in aspect-based middleware * Security and privacy in service-oriented architectures * Middleware-level security monitoring and measurement * Middleware-driven lightweight secure composition * Architecture-driven lightweight secure composition * Security and privacy in enterprise mashups * Usability and security in lightweight composition IMPORTANT DATES Submission of paper: August 1, 2009 Acceptance notification: September 15, 2009 Submission of camera-ready: October 1, 2009 Workshop: November 30, 2009 SUBMISSION GUIDELINES The workshop solicits original research papers in any of the above-mentioned topics. The workshop organizers also solicit relevant experience results from industry experts. Papers should not exceed 6 pages and should be prepared according to the standard ACM format. Accepted papers will be published in the workshop proceedings and made available through the ACM Digital Library. ORGANIZERS Riccardo Scandariato, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, BE Giovanni Russello, CREATE-NET, IT WEB CHAIR Tom Goovaerts, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, BE PROGRAM COMMITTEE Jean Bacon, University of Cambridge, UK David Chadiwck, University of Kent, UK Bart De Win, Ascure, BE Changyu Dong, Imperial College, UK Naranker Dulay, Imperial College, UK David Eyers, University of Cambridge, UK Emil Lupu, Imperial College, UK Fabio Martinelli, National Research Centre, IT Federica Paci, University of Trento, IT Anand Ranganathan, IBM Watson Centre, US Andreas Schmidt, Create-net, IT Roshan Thomas, Cobham Analytic Solutions, US Simon Tsang, Telecordia, US Tine Verhanneman, Atos, BE Ian Welch, Victoria University of Wellington, NZ Disclaimer: http://www.kuleuven.be/cwis/email_disclaimer.htm
Received on Tuesday, 9 June 2009 13:27:19 UTC