The 1st IEEE International Workshop on Secure Identity Management in the Cloud Environment

Event Dates

Jul 01, 2015 - Jul 05, 2015

Location

Taichung, Taiwan

Submission Deadline

Apr 02, 2015

[Introduction]

While identity management solutions are increasingly migrating to cloud, conventional identity management approaches are facing challenges in trust, security, privacy, computational efficiency, interoperability and service reliability in the cloud environment. Security concerns are reportedly among the biggest inhibitors holding back the wider adoption of cloud computing. Secure identity management, required by emerging cloud services, is receiving increasing attention from both service providers’ and end users’ perspectives, in terms of protection of enterprise assets and customers’ privacy in the cloud, respectively. This workshop solicits contributions describing state of the art methodology and technology innovations in the field of secure identity management in the cloud computing environment, encourages experience sharing (both positive and negative ones), and also welcomes disruptive work-in-progress ideas towards future concepts.

SIMICE is dedicated to the security aspect of identity management (IDM) in the cloud. To facilitate the communication between the two domains – conventional cryptography and cloud computing – two trackes, namely “New cryptography and security mechanisms” and “Cloud computing technology innovation to secure IDM in the cloud” are planned to attrack works from the two domains; looking at the same thing from two different perspectives. A third track, “Cross-sectorial aspects of cloud identity management” is also planned to attract works addressing cross-domain challenges.

Any submission whose content is relevant to the area of secure identity management in the cloud environment will be considered, but any submission whose subject matter is related to one of the three track topics will be particularly welcome. Practically-oriented approaches will also be appreciated.

[Tracks]

Track 1: New cryptography and security mechanisms for IDM in the cloud

privacy-preserving and trusted identities as services

cloud-based password managers

privacy-preserving biometrics authentication for cloud-based services

biometric data protection and management in the cloud

date processing and analysis in a protected domain

secure operations on encrypted data, e.g., via efficient homomorphic encryption and searchable encryption, for cloud services

private database querying in the cloud environment

digital rights management for media data for cloud storage and sharing

privacy protection of outsourced personal data from mobile device and social network

Track 2: Cloud computing technology innovation to secure IDM in the cloud

data separation design in the cloud environment

hybrid cloud architecture design for secure data management

federated and distributed identity management in the cloud

user-centric identity management in the cloud environment

hybrid hardware (e.g., chip-based) / software security enhancement mechanism

security-enhanced distributed computing framework design, e.g., MapReduce

secure database architecture and services for IDM in the cloud environment

identity management in a cyber-physical cloud

applications of new computer and software technologies to IDM context

Track 3: Cross-sectorial aspects of cloud identity management

lessons and best practice learnt from different sectors

culture, ethical, legal, and regulation factors

discrepancy in the understanding of trust and privacy across different sectors

survey of data security concerns and understandings from various sectors

standardization

[Paper Submission]

Authors are invited to submit original, unpublished research papers as well as industrial practice papers. Simultaneous submissions to other publications and conferences are not permitted.

The length of a camera ready paper will be limited to 6 pages (IEEE Proceedings style) with up to 2 additional pages (with charges for each additional page) printed on 10-12 point fonts.

Authors must follow IEEE CS Press Proceedings Author Guidelines to prepare papers. At least one of the authors of each accepted paper is required to pay full registration fee and present the paper at the workshop in person.

[Organizers]

Bian Yang, Gjøvik University College, Norway

Julien Bringer, Morpho, France

[Advisor]

Christoph Busch, Center for Advanced Security Research, Darmstadt, Germany

[Program Committee]

Erik-oliver Blass, Airbus Group Innovations, Germany

Julien Bringer, Morpho, France

Christoph Busch, CASED, Germany

Hervé Chabanne, Morpho and Télécom ParisTech, France

Martin Gilje Jaatun, SINTEF, Norway

Qi Han, Harbin Institute of Technology, China

Pei-Yun Hsueh, IBM T.J. Watson Research Center, United States

Thomas Kemmerich, Norwegian Information Security Laboratory, Norway

Els Kindt, KU Leuven, Belgium

Mingyu Li, Chinese Academy of Sciences, China

Qiong Li, Harbin Institute of Technology, China

Zheming Lu, Zhejiang University, China

Hao Luo, Zhejiang University, China

Xiamu Niu, Harbin Institute of Technology, China

Shantanu Rane, PARC, USA

Christian Rathgeb, CASED, Germany

Chik-How Tan, National University of Singapore, Singapore

Qiang Tang, Interdisciplinary Centre for Security, Reliability and Trust, Luxembourg

Per Thorsheim, God Praksis AS, Norway

Bian Yang, Norwegian Information Security Laboratory, Norway

Jiantao Zhou, University of Macao, Macao

Xuebing Zhou, Huawei European Research Center, Germany