From: rah@shipwright.com (Robert Hettinga)
To: bsdc@ai.mit.edu
Message Hash: e65dcf5178a35f727885ae708a1b91cb843183b7ba19b7ea779a16ebc8719355
Message ID: <v02120d00acc9aa51a6cc@[199.0.65.105]>
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UTC Datetime: 1995-11-11 01:47:12 UTC
Raw Date: Sat, 11 Nov 1995 09:47:12 +0800
From: rah@shipwright.com (Robert Hettinga)
Date: Sat, 11 Nov 1995 09:47:12 +0800
To: bsdc@ai.mit.edu
Subject: CFP: CARDIS 1996
Message-ID: <v02120d00acc9aa51a6cc@[199.0.65.105]>
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Found this in sci.crypt.research.
Notice the name at the top of the program committee...
Cheers,
Bob Hettinga
___________________________________________
First Call For Papers
CARDIS 1996
SECOND SMART CARD RESEARCH AND ADVANCED APPLICATION CONFERENCE
September 18-20, 1996, Amsterdam, The Netherlands
AIMS AND GOALS
Smart cards or IC cards offer a huge potential for information
processing purposes. The portability and processing power of IC cards
allow for highly secure conditional access and reliable distributed
information systems. IC cards are already available that can perform
highly sophisticated cryptographic computations. The applicability of
IC cards is currently limited mainly by our imagination; the
information processing power that can be gained by using IC cards
remains as yet mostly untapped and is not well understood. Here lies a
vast uncovered research area which we are only beginning to assess, and
which will have great impact on the eventual success of the technology.
The research challenges range from electrical engineering on the
hardware side to tailor-made cryptographic applications on the software
side, and their synergies.
Many currently existing events are mainly devoted to commercial and
application aspects of IC cards. In contrast, the CARDIS conferences
aim to bring together researchers who are active in all aspects of
design of IC cards and related devices and environment, such as to
stimulate synergy between different research communities and to offer a
platform for presenting the latest research advances. CARDIS 1994,
sponsored by the International Federation for Information Processing
(IFIP) and held in November 1994 in Lille, France, has successfully
brought together representatives from leading IC research centers from
all over the world. CARDIS 1996 will be the second occasion for the IC
card community in this permanent activity. CARDIS 1996 will be
organised jointly by the Centre for Mathematics and Computer Science at
Amsterdam (CWI) and the Department of Computer Systems of the
University of Amsterdam (UvA).
SUBMISSIONS
Submissions will be judged on relevance, originality, significance,
correctness, and clarity. Each paper should explain its contribution in
both general and technical terms, identifying what has been
accomplished, saying why it is significant, and comparing it with
previous work. Authors should make every effort to make the technical
content of their papers understandable to a broad audience. Papers
should be written in English.
Authors should submit:
* 16 copies
* of a full paper
* typeset using the Springer LNCS format (see instructions below)
* not exceeding 20 pages in length
* printed double-sided if possible
* addressed to
Pieter H. Hartel
Univ. of Amsterdam
Dept. of Computer Systems
Kruislaan 403
1098 SJ Amsterdam
The Netherlands
In addition, each submission should be accompanied by information
submitted via WWW, (http://www.cwi.nl/~brands/cardis/submit.html) or
submitted via email to cardis@fwi.uva.nl that consists of:
* a single postal address and electronic mail address for
communication
* complete title, author and affiliation information
* the abstract of the paper
* a small selection of the keywords that appear on this call for
papers, which best describe the contribution of the paper
Proceedings will be available at the conference. It is intended to
publish the proceedings in the Springer LNCS series. Authors of
accepted papers may be expected to sign a copyright release form.
IMPORTANT DATES
Submission deadline March 1, 1996
Acceptance notification May 15, 1996
Camera ready paper due July 1, 1996
Conference September 18--20 1996
THEMES
Technology/hardware
1 IC architecture and techniques
2 Memories and processor design
3 Read/Write unit engineering
4 Specific co-processors for cryptography
5 Biometry
6 Communication technologies
7 Interfaces with the user, the service suppliers
8 Reliability and fault tolerance
9 Special devices
10 Standards
Software
11 The operating system
12 Models of data management
13 Communication protocols
IC Card design
14 Tools for internal or external software production
15 Validation and verification
16 Methodology for application design
Electronic payment systems
17 Road pricing
18 Internet payment systems
19 Untraceability
Algorithms
20 Formal specification and validation
21 Identification
22 Authentication
23 Cryptographic protocols for IC cards
24 Complexity
Security
25 Models and schemes of security
26 Security interfaces
27 Hardware and software implementation
28 Security of information systems including cards
29 Formal verification of transaction sets
30 Protocol verification
IC Cards, individuals and the society
31 IC cards and privacy
32 Owner access of data
33 IC cards: political and economical aspects
34 Is the IC card going to change legislation?
35 Patents, copyrights
Future of ic cards
36 Innovative technologies
37 Moving towards the pocket intelligence
38 Convergence with portable PCs, lap tops etc ...
39 PCMCIA
Innovative applications
40 Design methodology of applications
41 IC cards and the information system
42 Examples of new applications
43 Requirements for innovative cards
Standards
44 Emerging standards
45 Compliance and approval
ORGANISATION
Steering committee chairman:
Vincent Cordonnier (Rd2p, Lille)
Local organisation:
Pieter Hartel (Southampton, UK and UvA, The Netherlands)
Stefan Brands (CWI, The Netherlands)
Eduard de Jong (QC consultancy, The Netherlands)
General Chairman:
Pieter Hartel (Southampton, UK and UvA, The Netherlands)
Program Chairmen:
Pierre Paradinas (Rd2p, Lille)
Jean-Jacques Quisquater (Louvain-la-Neuve, Belgium)
Program committee
Stefan Brands (CWI, Amsterdam)
Andr\'e Gamache (Qu\'ebec, Canada)
Louis Guillou (CCETT, France)
Josep Domingo Ferrer (Tarragon, Spain)
Pieter Hartel (Southampton, UK and UvA, The Netherlands)
Hans-Joachim Knobloch (Karlsruhe, Germany)
Pierre Paradinas (Rd2p, France)
Reinhard Posch (Graz, Austria)
Jean-Jacques Quisquater (Louvain-la-Neuve, Belgium)
Matt Robshaw (RSA, inc, USA)
Bruno Struif (GMD, Germany)
Doug Tygar (Carnegie-Mellon, USA)
LECTURE NOTES IN COMPUTER SCIENCE
Advice to Authors for the Preparation of Camera-Ready Contributions to
LNCS/LNAI Proceedings
The preparation of manuscripts which are to be reproduced by
photo-offset requires special care. Manuscripts which are submitted in
technically unsuitable form will be returned for retyping or cancelled
if the volume otherwise cannot be finished on time. In order to make
the volume look as uniform as possible the following instructions
should be followed closely.
************
* PRINTING AREA:
Using 10-point font size for the main text the printing area should be
12.2 x 19.3 cm. Manuscripts prepared in this preferred format are
reproduced in the same size in the book. With these settings, the
interline distance should be arranged in such a way that some 42 to 45
lines occur on a full-text page.
* TYPEFACE and SIZE:
We recommend the use of Times or one of the similar typefaces widely
used in phototypesetting. (In Times and similar typefaces the letters
have serifs, i.e., short endstrokes at the head and the foot of
letters.) Please do not use a sans-serif typeface for running text,
except for computer programs.
The text should always be justified to occupy the full line width, so
that the right margin is not ragged. For normal text please use
10-point type size and one-line spacing. Small print (abstract and
affiliation) should be set in 9-point type size. Please use italic
print to emphasize words in running text; bold type in running text
and underlining should be avoided.
Headings should be capitalized (i.e., nouns, verbs and all other words
with at least five letters should have a capital initial) and should,
with the exception of the title, be aligned to the left. The font
sizes are as follows:
************
Heading level Example Font size and style
Title (centered) Type Theory 14 point, bold
1st-level heading 1 Introduction 12 point, bold
2nd-level heading 2.1 Simple Connections 10 point, bold
3rd-level heading Typing Rules. 10 point, bold
4th-level heading Remarks: (text follows) 10 point,italic
************
* FIGURES:
If possible, originals should be pasted into the manuscript and
centered between the margins; if no originals of the required size are
available, figures may be reduced in scale and pasted into the text.
For halftone figures (photos), please forward high-contrast glossy
prints and mark the space in the text as well as the back of the
photographs clearly, so that there can be no doubt about where or
which way up they should be placed. The lettering of figures should be
in 10-point font size. Figures should be numbered. The legends also
should be centered between the margins and be written in 9-point font
size as follows:
(bold) Fig. 3. (text follows)
* PAGE NUMBERING:
Your paper should show no printed page numbers; they are decided by
the volume editor and finally inserted by the printer. Please indicate
the ordering of your pages by numbering the sheets (using a light
blue/green pencil) at the bottom of the reverse side. There also
should be no running heads.
* PRINTING QUALITY:
For reproduction we need sheets which are printed on one side only.
Please use a high-resolution printer, preferably a laser printer with
at least 300 dpi or higher resolution if possible. It is desirable
that on all pages the text appears in the middle of the sheets.
* REMARK 1:
If your typesetting system does not offer the variety of font sizes
needed for the preparation of your manuscript according to these
instructions, you may choose a different (larger) font size and a
correspondingly scaled printing area (12-point font size for the
running text, for example, corresponds to a printing area of 15.3 x
24.2 cm and to a final reduction rate of 80%).
* REMARK 2:
You are encouraged to use LaTeX or TeX for the preparation of you
camera-ready manuscript together with the corresponding Springer style
files "llncs" (for LaTeX) or "plncs" (for TeX) to be obtained by
e-mail or by ftp/gopher as follows:
Mailserver: Send an e-mail message to
svserv@vax.ntp.springer.de containing the line
get /tex/latex/llncs.zip for the LaTeX syle files or
get /tex/plain/plncs.zip for the TeX style files.
Sending "help" to the server prompts advice on how to interact with
the mail server. The style files have to be unzipped and uu-decoded
for use. In case of problems in getting or uu-decoding the style files
please contact "springer vax.ntp.springer.de".
Ftp: The internet address is "trick.ntp.springer.de", the user id
"ftp" or "anonymous". Please enter your e-mail address as password.
The (above mentioned) files reside in "/pub/tex/latex/llncs".
Gopher: Point your client to "trick.ntp.springer.de".
-----------------
Robert Hettinga (rah@shipwright.com)
Shipwright Development Corporation, 44 Farquhar Street, Boston, MA 02131
USA (617) 323-7923
"Reality is not optional." --Thomas Sowell
>>>>Phree Phil: Email: zldf@clark.net http://www.netresponse.com/zldf <<<<<
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1995-11-11 (Sat, 11 Nov 1995 09:47:12 +0800) - CFP: CARDIS 1996 - rah@shipwright.com (Robert Hettinga)