Fifth Smart
Card Research and Advanced Application Conference
November 20-22, 2002
Hyatt Ste. Claire,
San Jose, California, USA
Sponsors
IFIP Working Group 8.8 (Smart Cards)
USENIX, the Advanced Computing Systems Association
Important
Dates
Submissions due: June 24, 2002
Notification of acceptance: August 12, 2002
Camera-ready final papers due: September 23, 2002
Overview
Smart card research is of increasing importance as the need for information
security increases rapidly, especially in response to new, urgent demands.
Since 1994, CARDIS has been the premier international research conference
dedicated to smart cards and their applications.
CARDIS '02, the joint IFIP/USENIX International Conference on Smart Card
Research and Advanced Applications, constitutes the Fifth IFIP CARDIS conference
and the Second USENIX conference on Smart Card Technology. Like its
predecessors, CARDIS '02 will bring together researchers and practitioners in
the development and deployment of smart card systems and technologies.
Aims and Goals
The portability, processing power, and tamper resistance of smart cards offers a
platform for secure conditional access to information and applications. Smart
cards significantly extend the scope of distributed systems by providing a
trusted platform for cryptographically secured computation and storage.
Notwithstanding their long history, relative to modern computing, the
applicability of smart cards in distributed systems remains an untapped
resource, limited mainly by our imagination and understanding. Here lie vast
uncovered research areas that will have a huge impact on the eventual success of
the technology. The research challenges span many domains, including hardware
design, cryptographic applications, distributed system architecture, and formal
modeling.
Unlike events devoted to commercial and application aspects of smart cards, the
CARDIS conferences bring together researchers who are active in all aspects of
the design, validation, and application of smart cards. The breadth of smart
card research stimulates a synergy among disparate research communities, making
CARDIS an ideal opportunity to present the latest research advances.
Call for Papers
The program committee seeks papers describing the design, application, and
validation of smart card technologies. Submissions across a broad range of
smart card development phases are encouraged, from exploratory research and
proof-of-concept studies to practical application and deployment of smart card
technology.
Topics
The following topics are of particular interest to the program committee:
- Application loading
- Smart card operating systems
- Virtual machines
- Integrated development environments
- High-speed, small-footprint encryption
- Cryptographic accelerators
- On-card data sharing schemes
- Smart cards in the Internet
- Automatic mask generation
- Emerging opportunities for standardization
- Smart tokens and other competing technologies
- Alternative form factors for smart card chips
- Smart card application program interfaces
- Trends in smart card hardware
- Research in tamper-resistance
- Hardware and software certification
- Security validation and benchmarks
- Biometrics involving smart cards
Refereed Papers
Papers that have been formally reviewed and accepted will be presented during
the conference and published in the conference proceedings. The proceedings will
be distributed to attendees and, following the conference, will be available
online to USENIX members and for purchase.
Best Paper Awards
Awards will be given at the conference for the best paper and the best paper
that is primarily the work of a student.
How and Where To Submit Refereed Papers
Papers should represent novel scientific contributions related to the topics
listed above. Both the work described in the paper and the paper itself must be
substantially complete at the time of the submission. Full papers are
encouraged, and should be about 8 to 14 typeset pages using an 11 pt font or
larger. Submissions must be received by June 24, 2002.
Papers will be accepted electronically, via a Web submission form, and must be
in PDF format (e.g., processed by Adobe's Acrobat Distiller). Please make sure
your submission can be opened using Adobe Acrobat 4.0. Please use this Web form
for submissions.
All submissions will be acknowledged electronically. If you have not received an
acknowledgment within 48 hours of submitting your paper electronically, please
contact the program chair at
cardis02chair@usenix.org.
For details on the submission process, authors are encouraged to consult the
detailed author guidelines.
All submissions will be judged on originality, contribution to the field, and
correctness. Accepted papers may be assigned a member of the program committee
to act as its shepherd through the preparation of the final paper. The shepherd
will act as a conduit for feedback from the committee to the authors. Authors
will be notified of acceptance by August 12, 2002. Camera-ready final paper due
date is September 23, 2002.
The program committee requires that papers not be submitted simultaneously to
another conference or publication and that submitted papers not be previously or
subsequently published elsewhere. When appropriate, authors should arrange for
a release for publication from their employer prior to submission. Papers
accompanied by non-disclosure agreement forms are unacceptable and will be
returned to the author(s) unread. Submitted manuscripts will be read by the
program committee and other selected members of the technical community for the
purposes of technical review, but otherwise will be held in strict confidence.
Specific questions about submissions may be sent via email to
cardis02chair@usenix.org.
Conference
Organizers
Program Chair
Peter Honeyman, CITI, University of Michigan
Program Committee
Isabelle Attali, INRIA Sophia Antipolis
Boris Balacheff, Hewlett Packard Labs, Bristol
Yves Deswarte, LAAS-CNRS, Toulouse
Josep Domingo-Ferrer, Universitat Rovira i Virgili, Tarragona
Pieter Hartel, Department of Computer Science, University of Twente
Dirk Husemann, IBM Research, Zurich
Sebastien Jean, LIFL, Lille
Thomas Jensen, IRISA/CNRS, Rennes
Roger Kilian-Kehr, T-Systems Nova GmbH, Darmstadt
Marc Joye, Gemplus, Gemenos
Xavier Leroy, INRIA, Rocquencourt, and Trusted Logic, Versailles
Bernd Meyer, Siemens AG, München
Mike Montgomery, SchlumbergerSema, Austin
Joachim Posegga, SAP Corporate Research, Karlsruhe
Ton van der Putte, Atos Origin, Utrecht
Jean-Jacques Quisquater, UCL, Louvain-la-Neuve
Rüdiger Weis, CryptoLabs, Amsterdam
Institutional Organizers
The International Federation for Information Processing is a non-governmental,
non-profit umbrella organization for national societies working in the field of
information processing. It was established in 1960 under the auspices of UNESCO
as an aftermath of the first World Computer Congress held in Paris in 1959.
Today, IFIP has several types of Members and maintains friendly connections to
specialized agencies of the UN system and non-governmental organizations.
Technical work, which is the heart of IFIP's activity, is managed by a series of
Technical Committees and their Working Groups.
USENIX is the Advanced Computing Systems Association. Its international
membership includes engineers, scientists, system administrators, and
technicians. USENIX conferences are recognized for delivering pragmatically
oriented, technically excellent programs in a highly interactive, vendor-neutral
forum.
Registration
Materials
Complete program and registration information will be available in September 2002
here on the conference Web site. The information will be in both html and a
printable PDF file. If you would like to receive the program booklet in print,
please email your request, including your postal address, to
conference@usenix.org.