| |||||||||||||||
CVCBT, IEEE Switzerland 2018 : Call for Papers for the 1st Crypto Valley Conference on Blockchain Technology (CVCBT), IEEE Switzerland | |||||||||||||||
Link: https://www.cryptovalleyconference.com/ | |||||||||||||||
| |||||||||||||||
Call For Papers | |||||||||||||||
Call for Papers for the 1st Crypto Valley Conference on Blockchain Technology (CVCBT), IEEE Switzerland
20-22 June 2018, Zug, Switzerland https://www.cryptovalleyconference.com/ IMPORTANT DATES Submission deadline for papers: 01.03.2018 (extended) Submission deadline for posters: 15.03.2018 Acceptance notifications: 01.04.2018 Early registration deadline: 20.04.2018 CALL FOR PAPERS The emergence of blockchain technologies, which span cryptocurrencies, distributed ledgers and decentralized applications, has enabled trade and interaction without a centralized, trusted third party. In turn, this has led to significant innovation in the FinTech industry, along with unprecedented levels of grassroots interest in crowd-funding blockchain infrastructure projects, coupled with a vibrant effort in blockchain startups across the globe. In concert, the research community has taken an interest in the science and engineering of blockchains and blockchain applications, with early publications that have appeared in a wide range of venues spanning top security, distributed systems and finance conferences and journals. The first CRYPTO VALLEY conference on Blockchain Technology, IEEE Switzerland, aims to unite interested scholars as well as industrial members from all relevant disciplines who study and work in the space of blockchain technology. Suggested contribution topics include (but are not limited to) empirical and theoretical studies of: Anonymity and privacy issues and measures to enhance them Applications using or built on top of blockchains Atomic swaps and cross blockchain communication Big Data and blockchain technology Blockchain use cases and domain analysis Case studies (including adoption, attacks, forks, scams, and others) Censorship Consensus protocols for blockchains Cryptocurrency adoption and economic impacts Decentralized applications (e.g. exchanges, mining pools, trading platforms) Developing countries and blockchain adoption Economic and monetary aspects Extensions to established cryptocurrencies such as Bitcoin, Ethereum, ZCash, Monero and others Forensics and monitoring Formal verification of blockchain protocols and smart contracts Fraud detection and financial crime prevention Governance Identity, identification and trust in blockchain systems Implications for existing business models Interfacing fiat and cryptocurrencies Intermediates in different industries and their future Internet of Things (IoT) and blockchain technology Legal implications of smart contracts Legal, ethical and societal aspects of (decentralized) virtual currencies, ICO/TGE New applications and business models for permissioned/permissionless blockchain Off-chain payment channels Peer-to-peer networks Permissioned and permissionless blockchains Privacy and anonymity-enhancing technologies Proof-of-work, -stake, -burn, proof-of-*, and virtual mining Real-world measurements and metrics Regulation and law enforcement Relation to other payment systems Scalability and scalable services for blockchain systems Security of blockchain protocols Smart contract programming languages and VMs Transaction graph analysis Usability and user studies The conference solicits manuscripts that represent significant and novel research contributions. Submissions must not substantially overlap with works that have been published or that are simultaneously submitted to a journal or a conference with proceedings. Submissions should follow the IEEE Conference Proceedings Format format and should not exceed 10 pages, excluding references and well-marked appendices. There is no limit on the length of the references and appendices. Accepted papers will appear in the IEEE proceedings published by IEEE. Authors who seek to submit their works to journals may opt-out by publishing an extended abstract only. Short papers (4 pages or less including references and appendices) are also welcome and should be submitted with "(short paper)" in the title. All submissions will be reviewed double-blind, and as such, must be fully anonymous. They should not contain author names, acknowledgments, affiliations, or self-citations that reveal authorship. Accepted papers will be published in the CVCBT-2018 Conference Proceedings and IEEE Xplore (pending approval). PROGRAM COMMITTEE * Program Committee Chairs * Emin Gün Sirer, Cornell University Arthur Gervais, Imperial College London Alexander Denzler, Lucerne University of Applied Sciences and Arts * Program Committee Members * Ittai Abraham, VMware Research Group Elli Androulaki, IBM Research Rainer Böhme, University of Innsbruck Joseph Bonneau, NYU Jeremy Clark, Concordia University Christian Decker, Blockstream Bryan Ford, EPFL Juan Garay, Texas A&M University Matthew Green, Johns Hopkins University Georges Grivas, Lucerne University of Applied Sciences and Arts Aniket Kate, Purdue University Michael Kaufmann, Lucerne University of Applied Sciences and Arts Aggelos Kiayias, University of Edinburgh & IOHK William Knottenbelt, Imperial College London Sarah Meiklejohn, University College London Andrew Miller, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign Catherine Mulligan, Imperial College London Saša Radomirovic, University of Dundee Tim Ruffing, Saarland University Yonatan Sompolinsky, The Hebrew University Alessandro Sorniotti, IBM Research Roger Wattenhofer, ETH Zurich Tim Weingärtner, Lucerne University of Applied Sciences and Arts Thaddeus Dryja, MIT DCI Christian Cachin, IBM Research - Zurich Rainer Böhme, University of Innsbruck Adrian Gheorghe, Old Dominion University Yonatan Sompolinsky, The Hebrew University |
|