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CBT 2019 : 3rd International Workshop on Cryptocurrencies and Blockchain Technology, in conjunction with ESORICS 2019 | |||||||||||||||
Link: http://cbtworkshop.org/ | |||||||||||||||
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Call For Papers | |||||||||||||||
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CALL FOR PAPERS ********************************************************************* 3rd International Workshop on Cryptocurrencies and Blockchain Technology - CBT'19 In conjunction with ESORICS 2019 http://www.cbtworkshop.org/ September 26-27, 2019, University of Luxembourg, Luxembourg. ** Deadline Extended: July 2, 2019 (Firm)** ********************************************************************* IMPORTANT DATES ================ Deadline (Papers): July 2, 2019 (Anywhere) *Firm* Deadline (Posters): August 1st, 2019 (Anywhere) *Firm* Notification (Papers): July 25, 2019 Camera Ready (Papers): August 6, 2019 ********************************************************************* Since the appearance of Bitcoin in 2009, a plethora of new cryptocurrencies and other blockchain based systems have been deployed with different success. While some of them are slightly different copies of Bitcoin, other ones propose interesting improvements or new usages of the underlying blockchain technology. However, the novelty of such technologies is often tied with rapid developments and proof-of-concept software, and rigorous scientific analyses of the proposed systems are often skipped. This workshop aims to provide a forum for researchers in this area to carefully analyze current systems and propose new ones in order to create a scientific background for a solid development of new cryptocurrencies and blockchain technology systems. The main topics include (but are not limited to): * Anonymity and privacy in cryptocurrencies. * Privacy-preserving technologies. * Cryptocurrency based trust systems. * Security analysis of existing cryptocurrencies. * Formal threat models in cryptocurrency systems. * Improvement proposals for existing cryptocurrencies. * P2P network cryptocurrencies analysis. * Private transactions in blockchain based systems. * Consensus mechanisms: proof-of-work, proof of stake, proof of burn, proof-of-useful-work. * New usages of the blockchain technology. * Scalability solutions for blockchain systems. * Smart contracts. =============== REGULAR PAPERS =============== Regular and short papers must be original and not submitted for publication elsewhere. Authors are invited to submit their manuscripts following the LNCS Proceedings Manuscript style. Papers are limited to 16 pages (full papers), or 8 pages (short papers) including references and appendices, and can be submitted as PDF via the CBT 2019 submission site: https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=cbt19 *Double blind review*: CBT requires anonymized submissions -- please make sure that submitted papers contain no author names or obvious self-references. Accepted regular papers will be published by Springer in the LNCS collection. At least one author of each accepted paper is required to register and present their work at the workshop; otherwise the paper will not be included in the proceedings. ========= POSTERS ========= We welcome poster abstracts describing works in progress, or innovative ideas not mature enough to be presented as a paper. The poster track will provide an opportunity to present early-stage work and receive feedback from the community, especially on thought-provoking or controversial work, approaches, or ideas from students. Submit your posters to cbt19@easychair.org Posters shall be submitted for review in the form of an extended abstract that has to be formatted in LNCS-style and not exceed 1 page in length, with a PDF draft of the proposed poster included as page 2 of the submission (A0 size in portrait mode, W 841mm x H 1189 mm, with all fonts embedded in the PDF file). In addition, poster titles should always start with the phrase 'Poster Abstract:'. Accepted posters will be presented at the workshop in a separate session. Registration stipends for the worshop registration are available for students that present their posters at CBT2019. Note that the poster abstracts have a separate deadline from the regular papers. Please contact cbt19@easychair.org in case of doubts and questions. ========= KEYNOTE ========= We are pleased to announce that Arthur Gervais will be one of our keynote speakers. Title: Private information retrieval & layer-two systems Abstract: TBA SHORT BIOGRAPHY: Dr. Gervais is lecturer at Imperial College London (UK). He is Co-Founder, CEO, of Blockchain Scalability Platform. His research focuses on the security, privacy and performance of blockchain technology. Because this technology is still in its infancy, he largely focus on understanding and quantifying the tension points and tradeoffs in terms of security, privacy and performance, with the goal to build a mainstream, scalable, open, and decentralized blockchain protocol. Part of his research is e.g., the design of usable software that securely interacts with networks and hardware, connecting the real world with blockchain, and the design of practical and scalable blockchain platform. His research is inherently multidisciplinary and he frequently collaborate with colleagues worldwide in various fields (e.g., machine learning). ================== PROGRAM COMMITEE ================== PC Chairs: * Alex Biryukov, University of Luxembourg, Luxembourg * Joaquin Garcia-Alfaro, Telecom SudParis, France PC Members: * Daniel Augot - INRIA Saclay (France) * Jean-Philippe Aumasson - Kudelski (Switzerland) * George Bissias - University of Massachusetts at Amherst (USA) * Joseph Bonneau - NYU (USA) * Rainer Bohme - University of Innsbruck (Austria) * Christian Decker - Blockstream (Switzerland) * Sergi Delgado-Segura - UCL (UK) * Arthur Gervais - Imperial College London (UK) * Hannes Hartenstein - KIT (Germany) * Jordi Herrera-Joancomarti - UAB (Catalonia) * Man Ho Au - The Hong Kong Polytechnic University (Hong Kong) * Ghassan Karame - NEC Research (Germany) * Aniket Kate - Purdue University (USA) * Eleftherios Kokoris-Kogias - EPFL (Switzerland) * Patrick McCorry - UCL (UK) * Zaki Manian - Trusted IoT Alliance (USA) * Shin'ichiro Matsuo - Georgetown University (USA) * Pedro Moreno-Sanchez - TU Wien (Autria) * Guillermo Navarro-Arribas - UAB (Catalonia) * Cristina Perez-Sola - UOC (Catalonia) * Bart Preneel - Katholieke Universiteit Leuven (Belgium) * Tim Ruffing - Blockstream (Switzerland) * Fatemeh Shirazi - Web3 Foundation (Switzerland) * Ewa Syta - Trinity College (USA) * Khalifa Toumi - SystemX (France) * Edgar Weippl - SBA Research (Austria) Further details at http://www.cbtworkshop.org/ |
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