|   Computer Security History Workshop-Call For Papers     Posted: 28 Aug 2013 06:34 AM PDT The Charles Babbage Institute (CBI) is conducting a three-year  NSF funded research project on computer security, which focuses on  the years when the field of "computer security" was just emerging,  roughly the late 1960s through the early 1990s with the shift to  networked computing and the web. We are "building an  infrastructure" for future historical research through conducting  30 oral histories with computer-security pioneers, collecting  archival documents, creating a knowledge-networking wiki site, and  publishing scholarly work in this field.    Charles Babbage Institute  SRI International scientist and noted computer security pioneer  Peter Neumann was quoted last year in the New York Time's article  "Killing the Computer to Save It," that he has "…been tilting at  the same windmills for 40 years and…[he]…get[s] the impression that  most of the folks who are responsible don't want to hear about  complexity. They are interested in quick and dirty solutions."  Neumann is now heading a major DARPA effort to select the very best  computer security ideas from the past to better address today's  challenges. Many computer security pioneers emphasize that most of  the potentially useful (and often ignored) solutions to the nation  and world's many computer security challenges have fruitful seeds  in the more distant past (and that today's problems often resulted  from yesterday's choices in structuring computing and  networking).  The Charles Babbage Institute (CBI) is currently engaged in a  three year National Science Foundation- sponsored project "Building  an Infrastructure for Computer Security History." The project  consists of conducting oral histories, creating a computer security  wiki, and collecting and making available archival resources to  document computer security's past. In conjunction with this  project, CBI is hosting a workshop on computer security history on  July 11 and 12, 2014 and is seeking paper proposals for the event.  Preliminary plans have been laid to publish many of the revised  papers from the workshop in a 2015 IEEE Annals of the History  of Computing special issue on computer security.  All papers must be historical studies—ranging from the  technical, scientific, political, legal, social, and cultural  history of computer security (contemporary analyses of current  issues will not be considered). Potential topics include, but are  not limited to the history of pioneering work funded by the  military; Bell-LaPadula, Biba, Clark-Wilson and other computer  security models; TCSEC/The Orange Book/Rainbow Series; public key  encryption/PKI; computer crime/criminal justice; hacking and  hackers; intrusion detection; computer security companies; and the  computer security industry. Preference will be given for papers on  U.S. topics between the mid-1960s and the advent of the Web in the  early 1990s.  Requirements and logistics  To be considered for workshop participation, authors should send  a 500-750 word abstract detailing their proposed paper, which  includes discussion of the key sources for the study. Authors must  also submit a 2-page curriculum vitae. Applications should  be sent to cbi@umn.edu as PDF  documents no later than Friday September 13, 2013. For  accepted proposals, full papers (6000 to 8000 words including  footnotes) must be submitted for pre-circulation to the workshop's  participants by June 15, 2014. Travel assistance will be provided  to all accepted applicants, as well as lunches and an event dinner  on July 11, 2014.  URL: http://www.cbi.umn.edu/research/cfp.html     | 
  
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