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Call
for papers
1st
IFIP International Conference on Critical Information Infrastructure
Protectionwww.wcc2010.com/CIP |
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At
the 50th anniversary of the formation of the International Federation for
Information Processing the simple fact that national economies and
international commerce alike have become totally dependent upon the
reliable and secure operation of national and global information
infrastructures has been accepted. From the early days of 1960, with a
perceived competitive advantage through computer usage, to today’s
acknowledgement of total dependence upon computer systems and integrated
data networks on a global scale, the realization that the emerging digital
economy in nation states as well as national security and societal
well-being depend upon necessary critical information infrastructures has
been accepted by governments and all enterprises worldwide. In particular
the theme of CIP acknowledges that all basic or national critical
infrastructures themselves, from electrical power systems to
telecommunications structures to water/sewerage systems and so on, whether
owned and operated by the public or private sector, depend fundamentally
upon a national and critical information infrastructure. On a global scale
the evidence is clear that nations as well as international enterprises of
all natures in a global economy have moved to address this reality through
relevant draft legislation, regulations, industry codes and the like. At
the same time there is recognition at the United Nations level that the
rapid and almost unchecked rise of cybercrime is a reality. At the same
time there is also recognition that imperatives for national defence have
moved into cyberspace as well. Even topics related to the position of
information assurance at national levels; the political, ethical and legal
position related to the use of “information operations” and appropriate
responses to detected “cyber-attack”; the problems of “hardening” national
information infrastructures through public sector leadership and like
themes are now topics discussed in the open media globally. The topic of
CIIP, NIIP, NCI, or whatever term is used to describe this change, of
necessity brings together the skills of computers scientists and
mathematicians, engineers, information technologists and others to combine
with the vital efforts of legal professionals, public and defence policy
researchers, social scientists and psychologists, political scientists and
related disciplines to address a common goal to provide effective and
acceptable solutions to the growing threats.
CIIP 2010 is an
opportunity to address current thinking and research in these vital global
concerns from an international perspective. The conference presents a
unique opportunity, at a time when nationally, regionally and
internationally associated policies and legal regimes are under
development, to both ponder those activities as well as to provide
research leadership at both technical and policy levels.
Topics
include but are not limited to the following areas of interest: |
Policy and legal frameworks for CIP/CIIP National,
regional and international responses Private sector
response Role of trusted and evaluated
systems Economics/funding of CIP CIP in a Web 2/”Cloud”
computing scheme Organisational structures to address
CIP Roles/obligations of the ICT industry |
Protection of SCADA systems Identification of
critical subsystems Computer/network architecture for
CIP “Hardening” national information systems National defence
and CIP Education and training needs ICT structures for CIP
needs Needs for CIP related
applications | |
Programme
Committee Chairs
Professor
Emeritus William J (Bill) Caelli, AO Senior Research
Scientist Information Security Institute Queensland University of
Technology
Programme
Committee Members
TBA |
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| Submission of
papers: |
February
15, 2010 |
| Notification to authors: |
April 23, 2010 |
| Camera-ready copies: |
May 15,
2010 | |
Instructions
for paper submission
- Papers
must not substantially overlap with papers that have been
published or are simultaneously submitted to a journal or another
conference with proceedings.
- Papers
must be written in English; they should be at most 12 pages in
total, including bibliography and well-marked appendices. Papers
should be intelligible without appendices, if any.
- Accepted
papers will be presented at the conference and published in the
IFIP AICT (Advances in Information and Communication Technology)
Series by Springer.
- Submitted and accepted
papers must follow the publisher’s guidelines for the IFIP AICT
Series. Click here to download a copy of the publisher's
guidelines
- At
least one author of each accepted paper must register for the
conference and present the paper. Inclusion of the paper will be
dependent upon one registration for the paper.
- All
papers must be submitted in electronic form through the web via http://www.wcc2010.com/ by February 15, 2010.
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The
Congress
The
World Computer Congress (WCC2010) will bring together IT research
and industry sectors in one event. The congress will combine 17 IFIP
conferences with partner conferences from other international and
regional, specialist IT organisations.
The
conference content will be presented in eight program streams.
Delegates may attend any of the participating conference, industry
or partner events as well as networking, social, technical tours and
certification courses offered at the
congress. | |
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- Wireless
Communications and Information Technology in Developing
Countries (WCITD 2010)
- Biologically-Inspired
Collaborative Computing (BICC 2010)
- Distributed
and Parallel Embedded Systems (DIPES 2010)
- Artificial
Intelligence in Theory and Practice (IFIP AI 2010)
- Network
of the Future (NF)
- Enterprise
Architecture, Integration, Interoperability and Networking
(EAI2N)
- Human
Choice and Computers International Conference (HCC9
2010)
Track 2: Virtual Technologies and Social Shaping
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- International
Information Security Conference 2010 (SEC 2010)
- Critical
Information Infrastructure Protection (CIP)
- Human
Choice and Computers International Conference (HCC9
2010)
Track 3: Surveillance and Privacy
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- Theoretical
Computer Science (TCS 2010)
- Human
Computer Interaction (HCI 2010)
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- Key
Competencies in the Knowledge Society (KCKS 2010)
- History
of Computing (HC)
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- Global
Information Systems Processes (GISP)
- E-Government
and E-Services (EGES)
- Human
Choice and Computers conference (HCC9 2010)
Track 1:
Ethics and ICT Governance
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- Human
Choice and Computers International Conference (HCC9 2010)
Track 4: ICT and Sustainable Development
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- Entertainment
Computing Symposium (ECS 2010)
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