<Apologies for cross-posting>
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IEEE International Workshop on Future Networks for Secure Smart Cities
(FNSSC 2017)
May 8-12, 2017 / Lisbon, Portugal.
(Organized in conjunction with IFIP/IEEE IM 2017)
https://fnssc.itl.waw.pl/
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Call for Papers
---------------
Future Smart Cities are expected to carry massive amount of extremely sensitive 
data related to residents’ private life. Just to mention a few, information 
about transportation, health care, public administration, education will be 
constantly collected and processed in order to provide citizens with essential 
services on a daily basis. This trend rises widespread concerns about the 
security of the infrastructure used to gather and analyze those data.
Traditional computer networks seem to lack all the necessary features to 
smoothly implement the required mechanisms to protect the infrastructure and 
the transferred data therein. In fact, inherent characteristics of traffic, 
network topologies and devices present in Smart Cities make the design and 
implementation of security mechanisms extremely challenging.
Although common good practices are followed by devices manufacturers and 
vendors, the integration of different devices still presents a number of issues 
with regard to interconnectivity, communication, applicability, security and 
privacy. Moreover, many of the devices classified into the Internet of Things 
have limited resources (from the point of view of computing power and storage), 
which makes the execution of complex communication and security mechanisms 
difficult.
An interesting, yet unexplored, research area lays at the intersection of novel 
network paradigms, like the Software-Defined Networking (SDN) and the 
Information-Centric Networking (ICN). Those novel approaches considerably 
extend the toolkit available to network operators by enhancing control and 
data-plane logics. Novel paradigms may solve new challenges of security and 
data privacy, energy-consumption concerns and issues related to massive 
interconnectivity of objects and services.
The Workshop on "Future Networks for Secure Smart Cities" provides a forum for 
discussions on the potential of novel networking paradigms for the development 
of Smart Cities. It brings together industry and academia, engineers and 
researchers to propose solutions as well as to identify open security 
challenges in the design and maintenance of solutions in urban environments

Topics of Interest
------------------
The workshop invites submissions of unpublished works proposing architectures 
and mechanisms to improve the security of services provided within Smart 
Cities. Topics of interest include (but not limited to):
- Architectures for security monitoring in urban environments
- Interconnection of existing services in Smart Cities
- Trust management schemas
- SDN control plane application for anomalies detection in traffic scenarios
- Security and energy-saving improvements for SDN/ICN protocols
- Solutions for interconnectivity and security in smart buildings
- Advanced fault tolerance and resiliency mechanisms
- Lightweight secure solutions to interconnect sensor networks in urban zones
- Threats and countermeasures of massive interconnectivity
- Use cases for SDN and ICN in Smart Cities
- Integration of SDN and ICN protocols

Important Dates
---------------
Paper registration: Dec 15, 2016 (Thursday)
Paper Submission: Dec 19, 2016 (Monday)
Notification of acceptance/rejection: Jan 30, 2017 (Monday)
Camera ready: Feb 15, 2017 (Wednesday)
Submission Guidelines
---------------------
Prospective authors are invited to submit original, unpublished works for 
publication in the IEEE IM 2017 proceedings and for presentation in the 
workshop.
Please, follow the same instructions as for IM Technical 
Papers<http://im2017.ieee-im.org/call-submissions> (IEEE 2-column style to be 
included in IEEE Xplore). However, in order to undergo the single-blind review 
process, submissions must have a maximum length of 6 pages (including title, 
abstract, all the tables and figures and references). Papers should be 
submitted through 
JEMS<https://jems.sbc.org.br/jems2/index.php?r=conference/main&c=2682> by 
selecting IM 2017 – FNSSC 2017 track.

Workshop Chairs
---------------
- Jordi Mongay Batalla, NIT, Poland.
- Jérôme François, INRIA Nancy, France.
- Thomas Engel, University of Luxembourg, Luxembourg.

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