1997-01-29 - FC97: PRELIMINARY CONFERENCE PROGRAM

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From: Robert Hettinga <rah@shipwright.com>
To: FC97 Conference Distribution <rah@shipwright.com>
Message Hash: 0be257588f5cc2a9d086e7ce50f981b223ff17e77d005e1c4dc877e32fb6bf54
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UTC Datetime: 1997-01-29 13:18:31 UTC
Raw Date: Wed, 29 Jan 1997 05:18:31 -0800 (PST)

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From: Robert Hettinga <rah@shipwright.com>
Date: Wed, 29 Jan 1997 05:18:31 -0800 (PST)
To: FC97 Conference Distribution <rah@shipwright.com>
Subject: FC97: PRELIMINARY CONFERENCE PROGRAM
Message-ID: <v0300780baf14f7ed77a7@[139.167.130.246]>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain


		      Financial Cryptography '97
		  February 24-28 1997, Anguilla, BWI
		       PRELIMINARY PROGRAM


General Information:

Financial Cryptography '97 (FC97) is a new conference on the security
of digital financial transactions.  The first meeting will be held on
the island of Anguilla in the British West Indies on February 24-28,
1997.  FC97 aims to bring together persons involved in both the
financial and data security fields to foster cooperation and exchange
of ideas.

Original papers were solicited on all aspects of financial data
security and digital commerce in general.

Program Committee:

Matthew Franklin, AT&T Laboratories--Research, Murray Hill, NJ, USA
Michael Froomkin, U. Miami School of Law, Coral Gables, FL, USA
Rafael Hirschfeld (Program Chair), CWI, Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Arjen Lenstra, Citibank, New York, NY, USA
Mark Manasse, Digital Equipment Corporation, Palo Alto, CA, USA
Kevin McCurley, Sandia Laboratories, Albuquerque, NM, USA
Charles Merrill, McCarter & English, Newark, NJ, USA
Clifford Neuman, Information Sciences Institute, Marina del Rey, CA, USA
Sholom Rosen, Citibank, New York, NY, USA
Israel Sendrovic, Federal Reserve Bank of New York, New York, NY, USA

Preliminary Conference Program for FC97:

Monday 24 February 1997

 830 --  905

    Anonymity Control in E-Cash Systems
    George Davida (University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, WI, USA),
    Yair Frankel (Sandia National Laboratories, Albuquerque, NM, USA),
    Yiannis Tsiounis (Northeastern University, Boston, MA, USA),
    Moti Yung (CertCo, New York, NY, USA)

 905 --  940

    How to Make Personalized Web Browsing Simple, Secure, and Anonymous
    Eran Gabber, Phil Gibbons, Yossi Matias, Alain Mayer
        (Bell Laboratories, Lucent Technologies)

 940 -- 1015

    An Anonymous Networking Infrastructure and Virtual Intranets
    Jim McCoy (Electric Communities, Cupertino, CA, USA)

1015 -- 1045
    Coffee Break

1045 -- 1120

    Unlinkable Serial Transactions
    Paul F. Syverson (Naval Research Laboratory, Washington, DC, USA),
    Stuart G. Stubblebine (AT&T Labs--Research, Murray Hill, NJ, USA),
    David M. Goldschlag (Naval Research Laboratory, Washington, DC, USA)

1120 -- 1155

    Efficient Electronic Cash with Restricted Privacy
    Cristian Radu, Rene Govaerts, Joos Vandewalle
        (Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, Leuven, Belgium)

1155 -- 1230

    The SPEED Cipher
    Yuliang Zheng (Monash University, Melbourne, Australia)


Tuesday 25 February 1997

 830 --  930
    Invited Speaker
    To Be Announced

 930 -- 1005

    Smart Cards and Superhighways
        The technology-driven denationalisation of money
    David G.W. Birch, Neil A. McEvoy (Hyperion, Surrey, England)

1005 -- 1045
    Coffee Break

1045 -- 1120

    Fault Induction Attacks, Tamper Resistance, and Hostile Reverse
        Engineering in Perspective
    David P. Maher (AT&T Labs--Research, Murray Hill, NJ, USA)

1120 -- 1155

    Some Critical Remarks on "Dynamic Data Authentication" as
        specified in EMV '96
    Louis C. Guillou (CCETT, Cesson-Sevigne, France)

1155 -- 1230

    Single-chip implementation of a cryptosystem for financial
        applications
    Nikolaus Lange (SICAN Braunschweig GmbH, Braunschweig, Germany)


Wednesday 26 February 1997

 830 --  930
    Invited Speaker
    Ronald Rivest (MIT Lab for Computer Science, Cambridge, MA, USA)

 930 -- 1005

    Cyberbanking and Privacy: The Contracts Model
    Peter P. Swire (Ohio State University, Columbus, OH, USA)

1005 -- 1045
    Coffee Break

1045 -- 1120

    SVP: a Flexible Micropayment Scheme
    Jacques Stern, Serge Vaudenay (Ecole Normale Superieure, Paris, France)

1120 -- 1155

    An efficient micropayment system based on probabilistic polling
    Stanislaw Jarecki (MIT Lab for Computer Science, Cambridge, MA, USA),
    Andrew Odlyzko (AT&T Labs--Research, Murray Hill, NJ, USA)

1155 -- 1230

    On the continuum between on-line and off-line e-cash systems - I
    Yacov Yacobi (Microsoft, Redmond, WA, USA)


Thursday 27 February 1997

 830 --  905

    Auditable Metering with Lightweight Security
    Matthew K. Franklin, Dahlia Malkhi
        (AT&T Labs--Research, Murray Hill, NJ, USA)

 905 --  940

    Applying Anti-Trust Policies to Increase Trust in a Versatile
        E-Money System
    Markus Jakobsson (UCSD, La Jolla, CA, USA),
    Moti Yung (BTEC/CertCo, New York, NY, USA)

 940 -- 1015

    Towards Multiple-payment Schemes for Digital Money
    H. Pagnia, R. Jansen (University of Darmstadt, Darmstadt, Germany)

1015 -- 1045
    Coffee Break

1045 -- 1120

    Legal Issues in Cryptography
    Edward J. Radlo (Fenwick & West LLP, Palo Alto, CA, USA)

1120 -- 1230
    Panel Discussion
    Legal Issues of Digital Signatures
    Michael Froomkin (University of Miami School of Law, Miami, FL, USA),
    Charles Merrill (McCarter & English, Newark, NJ, USA),
    Benjamin Wright (Dallas, TX, USA)

Friday 28 February 1997

 830 --  930
    Invited Speaker
    To Be Announced

 930 -- 1005

    The Gateway Security Model in the Java Electronic Commerce Framework
    Theodore Goldstein (Sun Microsystems Laboratories/Javasoft)

1005 -- 1045
    Coffee Break

1045 -- 1120

    Highly Scalable On-line Payments Via Task Decoupling
    David William Kravitz (CertCo LLC, Albuquerque, NM, USA)

1120 -- 1155

    GUMP; Grand Unified Meta-Protocols
        Recipes for Simple, Standards-based Financial Cryptography
    Barbara Fox, Brian Beckman (Microsoft, Redmond, WA, USA)

1155 -- 1230

    Secure Network Communications and Secure Store & Forward Mechanisms
        with SAP R/3
    Bernhard Esslinger (SAP AG, Walldorf, Germany)





The conference will run from 8:30 AM to 12:30 PM, for five days, February
24-28 1997. Breakfast provided at the conference. The conference
organizers have left the afternoon and evenings open for corporate
sponsored events, for networking, and for recreational activities on the
resort island of Anguilla. Participants are encouraged to bring their families.

Workshop:

A 40-hour workshop, intended for anyone with commercial software
development experience who wants hands-on familiarity with the issues and
technology of financial cryptography, is planned in conjunction with FC97,
to be held during the week preceding the conference.

For more information on the workshop, please see the URL
http://www.cs.berkeley.edu/~iang/fc97/workshop.html .

For workshop registration, see the URL
http://www.offshore.com.ai/fc97/ .


Venue:

The InterIsland Hotel is a small 14-room guesthouse and a large,
comfortable 150 seat conference facility with additional space for a small
10-booth exhibition. The Inter-Island is on Road Bay, near Sandy Ground
Village, in the South Hill section of Anguilla. The conference, workshop,
and exhibition will have TCP/IP internet access. The rooms at the
InterIsland itself have sold out, but there are many other hotels
and guesthouses on Anguilla, and shuttle service to the conference will be
available.

Air Transportation and Hotels:

Air travel to Anguilla is typically done through either San Juan or St.
Thomas for US flights, or St. Maarten/Martin for flights from Europe and
the US.

Anguillan import duties are not imposed on hardware or software which will
leave the island again. There are no other taxes -- or cryptography
import/export restrictions -- on Anguilla.

Hotels range from spartan to luxurious, and more information about hotels
on Anquilla can be obtained from your travel agent, or at the URL
http://www.offshore.com.ai/fc97/ .


General Chairs:

Robert Hettinga, Shipwright/e$, Boston, MA, USA;
rah@shipwright.com

Vincent Cate, Offshore Information Services, Anguilla, BWI;
vince@offshore.com.ai

Conference, Exhibits, and Sponsorship Manager:

Julie Rackliffe, Boston, MA, USA;
rackliffe@tcm.org

Workshop Leader:

Ian Goldberg, Berkeley, CA, USA;
iang@cs.berkeley.edu


Registration:

You can register and pay for conference admission on the World Wide Web at
the URL http://www.offshore.com.ai/fc97/ .

The cost of the FC97 Conference is US$1,000.

Booths for the exhibition start at US$5,000 and include two conference
tickets. For more information about exhibit space, contact Julie Rackliffe,
rackliffe@tcm.org . Sponsorship opportunities for FC97 are still available.

The cost of the workshop is US$5000, and includes meals but not lodging.
You can register for the workshop, which runs the week prior to the
conference, at the URL <http:/www.offshore.com.ai/fc97>



Financial Cryptography '97 is held in cooperation with the
International Association for Cryptologic Research.

It is sponsored by:

The Journal for Internet Banking and Commerce
<http://www.arraydev.com/commerce/JIBC/>
Offshore Information Services <http://www.offshore.com.ai/>
e$ <http://www.shipwright.com/rah/>
C2NET <http://www.c2.net/>
See Your Name Here <mailto: rackliffe@tcm.org>

-----------------
Robert Hettinga (rah@shipwright.com), Philodox
e$, 44 Farquhar Street, Boston, MA 02131 USA
"The cost of anything is the foregone alternative" -- Walter Johnson
The e$ Home Page: http://www.shipwright.com/rah/
FC97: Anguilla, anyone? http://www.ai/fc97/
"If *you* don't go to FC97, *I* don't go to FC97"







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