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SILM 2020 : SILM 2020 Workshop on Software/Hardware Security | |||||||||||||||
Link: https://silm-workshop-2020.inria.fr/ | |||||||||||||||
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Call For Papers | |||||||||||||||
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Call for Paper SILM Workshop on Software/Hardware Security https://silm-workshop-2020.inria.fr September 11th, 2020 Genova, Italy ******************************************************************************* Co-located with Euro S&P 2020: https://www.ieee-security.org/TC/EuroSP2020/ Venue: Department of Economics (DIEC) of the University of Genova, Genova, Italy This workshop is organized as part of the SILM thematic semester funded by the French DGA and managed by Inria for the different partners of the PEC General Partnership Agreement. It is becoming increasingly important to combine software and hardware aspects in order to take into account new software attacks. For example, hardware vulnerabilities such as Spectre or Meltdown can be exploited by purely software attacks. Such attacks can be executed remotely and do not require physical access to the targeted hardware platform. On the other hand, hardware features can be used to better detect and respond to traditional software attacks, such as memory corruption. It is therefore necessary to study in depth the security of software/hardware interfaces, both in terms of attacks and defences. The purpose of the SILM workshop is to share experiences, tools, and methodologies to handle security in software/hardware interfaces. On one hand, we need to better assess the security guarantees provided by existing hardware architectures against software attacks, especially attacks against micro-architecture. This can be achieved by identifying new vulnerabilities using reverse engineering, fuzzing or other attack approaches. On the other hand, we also need to propose new architectures offering better resilience against software attacks. Theses architectures should rely on hardware-based security mechanisms to protect the software stack. One of the challenges is to formally specify and verify the security guarantees offered by such architectures. The goal of this second edition of the SILM workshop is to provide a forum for researchers and practitioners from academia, industry, and government that work on the security of software/hardware interfaces. ==== Topics of interest include, but are not limited to the following. * Hardware reverse engineering * Microcode security analyses * Software side-channel attacks * Software attacks against micro-architecture * Hardware-based security mechanisms * Software counter-measures against hardware vulnerabilities * Formal methods applied to the security of software/hardware interfaces * Hardware enclaves * Hardware trace mechanisms for security * OS and VM introspection ==== Important Deadlines: - Submission (extended): May 17, 2020 - 11:59pm AoE - Author Notification: June 8, 2020 - Camera Ready Version: June 22, 2020 - Workshop: September 11, 2020 ==== Submission and publication Authors are invited to submit papers formatted according to IEEE conference at https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=silm2020 There are two categories of submissions: 1. Regular papers describing fully developed work and complete results (10 pages, references included, IEEE format) 2. Short papers, position papers, industry experience reports, work-in- progress submissions (6 pages, references included, IEEE format) All papers should be in English and describe original work that has not been published or submitted elsewhere. The submission category should be clearly indicated. All submissions will be fully reviewed by members of the Program Committee. Papers will appear in IEEE Xplore in a companion volume to the regular EuroS&P proceedings. Papers must be typeset in LaTeX in A4 format (not “US Letter”) using the IEEE conference proceeding template we supply eurosp-2020-template.zip. We suggest you first compile the supplied LaTeX source as is, checking that you obtain the same PDF as the one supplied, and then write your paper into the LaTeX template, replacing the boilerplate text. Please do not use other IEEE templates. Failure to adhere to the page limit and formatting requirements can be grounds for rejection. ==== Program Chairs - Guillaume Hiet, CentraleSupélec/Inria - Frédéric Tronel, CentraleSupélec/Inria - Jean-Louis Lanet, Inria ==== Contact silm-workshop-2020@inria.fr ==== Program Committee - Pascal Cotret, ENSTA Bretagne - Damien Couroussé, CEA - Chris Dalton, HP Labs - Lucas Davi, University of Duisburg-Essen - Steven Derrien, University of Rennes 1 - Guy Gogniat, Univ. South Brittany - Karine Heydemann, LIP6 - Guillaume Hiet, CentraleSupélec/Inria (Chair) - Jean-Louis Lanet, Inria - Vianney Lapôtre, Univ. South Brittany - Cristofaro Mune, Pulse Security - Yves-Alexis Perez, ANSSI - Kaveh Razavi, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam - Jan Reineke, Saarland University - Erven Rohou, Inria - Simon Rokicki, ENS Rennes - André Seznec, Inria - Volker Stolz, HVL - Arnaud Tisserand, CNRS - Frédéric Tronel, CentraleSupélec/Inria - Pierre Wilke, CentraleSupélec/Inria - Yossi Oren, Ben-Gurion University - Yuval Yarom, University of Adelaide and Data61 |
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