CPS4CIP 2020 | Cyber-Physical Security for Critical Infrastructures Protection

CPS4CIP 2020 | Cyber-Physical Security for Critical Infrastructures Protection

The 1st International Workshop on Cyber-Physical Security for Critical Infrastructures Protection (CPS4CIP 2020)

https://sites.google.com/fbk.eu/cps4cip20

Co-located with The 25th European Symposium on Research in Computer Security (ESORICS 2020)

https://www.surrey.ac.uk/esorics-2020

Guildford, United Kingdom on September 14 – 18, 2020

 

About the COVID-19 emergency

Being a colocated event, the workshop will follow the decisions of the ESORICS organizing committee, that at the moment are:

The safety and well-being of all conference participants is our priority. After evaluating the ongoing COVID-19 situation, the decision has been made to run ESORICS 2020 and the associated workshops as an all-digital conference experience, and it will now be an online event. Therefore, ESORICS 2020 will take place as entirely virtual. The conference and workshop dates remain the same: September 14 – 18, 2020.

The conference proceedings will be published in the LNCS series as planned. Springer have committed to publishing LNCS proceedings even in the event that conferences are cancelled, held virtually, or postponed.

 

SCOPE & TOPICS

CPS4CIP’20 is the first workshop dedicated to the cyber-physical security for protecting critical infrastructures that support finance, energy, health, air transport, communication, gas, and water. The secure operation of these critical infrastructures is essential to the security of a nation, its economy, and the public’s health and safety. Security incidents in the critical infrastructures can directly lead to a violation of users’ safety and privacy, physical damages, significant economic impacts on individuals and companies, and threats to human life while decreasing trust in institutions and questioning their social value. Because of the increasing interconnection between the digital and physical worlds, these infrastructures and services are more critical, sophisticated and interconnected than ever before. This makes them increasingly vulnerable to attacks, as confirmed by the steady rise of cyber-security incidents, such as phishing or ransomware, but also cyber-physical incidents, such as physical violation of devices or facilities in conjunction with malicious cyber activities.

To address all these challenges, the CPS4CIP workshop has the objective of bringing together security researchers and practitioners from the various verticals of critical infrastructures (such as the financial, energy, health, air transport, communication, gas and water domains) to rethink cyber-physical security in the light of latest technology developments; e.g., Cloud Computing, Blockchain, Big Data, AI, Internet-of-Things (IoT). Specifically, value will be given to contributions focusing on the interplay between the digital and physical aspects of security problems and capable to foster new, intelligent, collaborative and more dynamic approaches to detect, prevent and mitigate security incidents, such as (i) intelligent monitoring and data collection of security-related information; (ii) predictive analytics over the collected data based on AI-based (i.e., deep learning mechanisms) that enable the identification of complex attack patterns; (iii) triggering of preventive and mitigation measures in advance of the occurrence of the attack; (iv) allowing all stakeholders to collaborate in vulnerability assessment, risk analysis, threat identification, threat mitigation, and compliance.

The workshop will provide a forum for dissemination, demonstration and discussion of original scientific and experimental results of cyber-physical security of critical infrastructures and services.

 

Topics of Interest

CPS4CIP invites submissions that present innovative ideas, proof of concepts, use cases, experience reports, and results from a variety of topics relevant to the security of critical infrastructures and services. Topics of interest include, but are not limited to:

  • AI, deep learning for predictive security of Critical Infrastructures
  • Integrated (cyber & physical) security
  • Collaborative risk assessment/mitigation in supply chains
  • Confronting complex threats and their cascading effects
  • Adaptive anomaly detection
  • Blockchain solutions for cyber and data security of critical infrastructures
  • Risk Assessment and management
  • Identification, assessment, and mitigation of cyber-physical threats
  • Automated vulnerability assessment and penetration testing services
  • Privacy preserving data collection and analytics
  • Dynamic security knowledge base
  • Measuring Security Levels in critical infrastructures
  • Adaptive security-related data collection
  • AI CCTV analytics
  • Security compliance services
  • Automation for detection, prevention and mitigation measures

 

Important Dates

  • Submission deadline: 28.06.2020 12.07.2020
  • Notification to authors: 28.07.2020 7.08.2020
  • Camera-ready versions: 20.08.2020

 

Paper Submission Guidelines

Submissions are to be made to the submission web site (https://sites.google.com/fbk.eu/cps4cip20) in pdf format. 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.

Submitted papers must not substantially overlap with papers that have been published or that have been simultaneously submitted to a journal or a conference with proceedings. Submissions should be at most 16 pages long (full paper), or 8 pages (short paper) including the bibliography and appendices, and should follow the LNCS style (http://www.springer.com/computer/lncs?SGWID=0-164-6-793341-0).

Pre-proceedings will be made available at the workshop. Accepted conference papers are planned to be published by Springer in the LNCS collection.

 

Workshop Organizers

 

General Chair(s)

Habtamu Abie, Norwegian Computing Center, Norway
Silvio Ranise, Fondazione Bruno Kessler (FBK), Italy

PC Chair(S)

Luca Verderame, University of Genova, Italy
Enrico Cambiaso, National Research Council (CNR), Italy
Rita Ugarelli, SINTEF, Norway
Gabriele Giunta, Engineering Ingegneria Informatica, Italy
Isabel Praça, GECAD/ISEP, Portugal
Federica Battisti, Università degli Studi Roma Tre, Italy

Program Committee

Dieter Gollmann, Hamburg University of Technology, Germany
Sokratis Katsikas, Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Norway
Javier Lopez, University of Malaga, Spain
Fabio Martinelli, IIT-CNR, Italy
Einar Arthur Snekkenes, Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Norway
Omri Soceanu, IBM Research, Israel
Stamatis Karnouskos, SAP Research, Germany
Reijo Savola, VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland, Finland
Alessandro Armando, University of Genoa, Italy
Alessio Merlo, University of Genoa, Italy
Cristina Alcaraz, University of Malaga, Spain
Giovanni Livraga, University of Milan, Italy
Gustavo Gonzalez-Granadillo, Atos Spain, Spain
Stefan Poslad, Queen Mary University of London, UK
Shouhuai Xu, University of Texas at San Antonio, USA
Christos Xenakis, University of Piraeus, Greece
Mauro Conti, University of Padua, Italy
Denis Caleta, Institute for Corporate Security Studies, Slovenia
Ali Dehghantanha, University of Guelph, Canada
Dušan Gabrielčič, Institute Jozef Stefan, Slovenia
Nikolaus Wirtz, Institute for Automation of Complex Power Systems RWTH Aachen University, Germany
Theodore Zahariadis, The National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, Greece
Adrien Bécue, AIRBUS Cyber Security, France
Lorenzo Sutton, Engineering Ingegneria Informatica spa, Italy
Harsha Ratnaweera, Norwegian University of Life Sciences, Norway
Volodymyr V. Tarabara, Michigan State University, USA
Christos Makropoulos, National Technical University of Athens, Greece
Alessandro Neri, Università degli Studi Roma Tre, Italy
Christos Makropoulos, National Technical University of Athens, Greece
Stefano Panzieri, Università degli Studi Roma Tre, Italy
David Tipping, Cornell University, Australia
Dionysis Nikolopoulos, National Technical University of Athens, Greece
Véronique Legrand, Cnam, France
Ioan Constantin, Orange Romania, Romania
Tim Stelkens-Kobsch, German Aerospace Center (DLR), Germany
Matteo Mangini, Network Integration and Solutions S.r.l., Italy
Mirjam Fehling-Kaschek, Fraunhofer Institute for High-Speed Dynamics, Germany
Vasileios Kazoukas, Center for Security Studies (KEMEA), Greece

 

Support

The workshop is supported by the projects of the European Cluster for Securing Critical Infrastructures
ECSCI – https://www.finsec-project.eu/#comp-k38hag4h namely