- From: <lvigano@inf.ethz.ch>
- Date: Wed, 13 Apr 2005 12:52:28 +0200
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************************************************************************** *** Due to several requests the DEADLINE is EXTENDED to April 24, 2005 *** ************************************************************************** ******************************************** *** Proceedings to be published in ENTCS *** ******************************************** ARSPA'05 The Second Workshop on Automated Reasoning for Security Protocol Analysis co-located with ICALP'05 Lisboa, Portugal July 16, 2005 http://www.avispa-project.org/arspa *********************** *** CALL FOR PAPERS *** *********************** Submission deadline: April 24, 2005 BACKGROUND, AIM AND SCOPE ========================= Experience over the last twenty years has shown that, even assuming perfect cryptography, the design of security protocols (or cryptographic protocols, as they are sometimes called) is highly error-prone and that conventional validation techniques based on informal arguments and/or testing are not up to the task. It is now widely recognized that only formal analysis can provide the level of assurance required by both the developers and the users of the protocols. Work in this direction initially started in the security community but recently there has been a tremendous progress thanks to contributions from different automated reasoning communities, such as model checking, resolution, planning, rewriting/narrowing, and higher-order theorem proving. There has been another wave of progress due to research in applying non-classical logics, such as epistemic and belief logics, to analyze protocols and their properties. Moreover, a third stream includes static methods, among which those based on abstract interpretation, data and control flow analysis, and type systems proved to be particularly successful. Finally, bisimulations and related techniques have also been applied successfully. Based on this progress, a large number of formal methods and tools have been developed that have been quite successful in determining strengths and weaknesses of many protocols, i.e. in proving the correctness of the protocols or in identifying attacks on them. The ARSPA workshop aims to bring together researchers and practitioners from both the security and the formal methods communities, from academia and industry, who are working on developing and applying automated reasoning techniques and tools for the formal specification and analysis of security protocols. Contributions are welcomed on the following topics or related ones: - Automated analysis and verification of security protocols. - Languages, logics and calculi for the design and specification of security protocols. - Verification methods: accuracy, efficiency. - Decidability and complexity of cryptographic verification problems. - Synthesis and composition of security protocols. - Integration of formal security specification, refinement and validation techniques in development methods and tools. The workshop will provide a forum for all researchers and practitioners who are interested in this area to share their ideas and report their results. We thus solicit submissions of papers both on mature work and on work in progress. All submissions will be peer-reviewed. Authors of accepted papers must guarantee that their paper will be presented at the workshop. AUDIENCE ======== The workshop will be held on Saturday, July 16, 2005, and will be open to all interested persons. INVITED TALKS ============= The technical program will include presentations of the accepted papers, and one or two invited talks. PROGRAM COMMITTEE ================= - Alessandro Armando (Universita` di Genova, Italy) - David Basin (ETH Zurich, Switzerland) - Jorge Cuellar (SIEMENS AG, Munich, Germany) - Pierpaolo Degano (Universita` di Pisa, Italy; co-chair) - Joshua Guttman (The MITRE Corporation, USA) - Roberto Gorrieri (Universita` di Bologna, Italy) - Sjouke Mauw (University of Eindhoven, The Netherlands) - Hanne Riis Nielson (Technical University of Denmark) - Michael Rusinowitch (INRIA-LORRAINE, Nancy, France) - Luca Vigano` (ETH Zurich, Switzerland; co-chair) SUBMISSION ========== Submissions should be at most 15 pages (a4paper, 11pt) and the cover page should include title, names of authors, and the co-ordinates of the corresponding author. Authors are invited to submit their papers electronically, as portable document format (pdf) or postscript (ps), by the deadline of April 24, 2005. The only mechanism for paper submissions is via the electronic submission web-site, accessible via the workshop web-site. Notification of acceptance or rejection will be sent to the authors no later than May 18, 2005. Final versions of accepted papers must be received by June 06, 2005. PUBLICATION =========== Accepted contributions will be be published in a special volume of the Electonic Notes in Theoretical Computer Science ENTCS. Informal proceedings will be available at the workshop and be published on-line on the workshop's web page at http://www.avispa-project.org/arspa We are also planning a formal post-workshop publication as a special Journal issue, with an additional reviewing process. IMPORTANT DATES =============== - Submission deadline: April 24, 2005 - Notification of acceptance: May 18, 2005 - Final versions due: June 06, 2005 - Workshop: July 16, 2005 WORKSHOP WEB-SITE ================= http://www.avispa-project.org/arspa The workshop is supported by the IST Project AVISPA (http://www.avispa-project.org) For further information on the workshop, please send an email to arspa -at- avispa-project.org
Received on Wednesday, 13 April 2005 10:52:40 UTC