FDTC 2011: Call for Papers

The 8th Workshop on Fault Diagnosis and Tolerance in Cryptography (FDTC 2011) will be held in Nara, Japan, on September 28, 2011.

FDTC 2011 is one day before CHES 2011 (September 28 – October 1, 2011)

The Call for Papers is also available for download as a PDF file.

Motivation & Scope

In recent years applied cryptography has developed considerably, to satisfy the increasing security requirements of various information technology disciplines, e.g., telecommunications, networking, data base systems and mobile applications. Cryptosystems are inherently computationally complex and in order to satisfy the high throughput requirements of many applications, they are often implemented by means of either VLSI devices (crypto-accelerators) or highly optimized software routines (crypto-libraries) and are used via suitable (network) protocols.

The high complexity of such implementations raises concerns regarding their reliability. Research is therefore needed to develop methodologies and techniques for designing robust cryptographic systems (both hardware and software), and to protect them against both accidental faults and intentional intrusions and attacks, in particular those based on the malicious injection of faults into the device for the purpose of extracting confidential information.

This annual workshop was started in 2004 and had follow-ups in 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009 and 2010.

Paper submission

Contributions to the workshop describing theoretical studies and practical case studies of fault diagnosis and tolerance in cryptographic systems (HW and SW) and protocols are solicited. Topics of interest include, but are not limited to:

All submissions should be made using the online submission system (http://fdtc.ws.dei.polimi.it/). Submissions should conform to the instructions below.

Important dates

Paper submission deadline: CLOSED (on 10 May 2011, 23:59 UTC)
Notification of acceptance: NOTIFIED
Final version deadline: July 8, 2011
Workshop: September 28, 2011

Instructions for authors

Submissions must not substantially duplicate work that any of the authors have published elsewhere or that have been submitted in parallel with any other conference or workshop. Submissions should be anonymous, with no author names, affiliations, acknowledgments or obvious references. Papers should be at most 10 pages (including the bibliography and appendices), with at least 11pt font and reasonable margins.

IEEE-CS CPS

Submission of final papers will be managed directly by Conference Publishing Services (CPS). Final papers must be formatted following the instructions in the related author kit. See: CPS Author Kit. Conference Publishing Services (CPS) will contact directly the authors for instructions and will send links to the publishing services.

Accepted papers will be published in an archival proceedings volume by Conference Publishing Services (CPS) and will be distributed at the time of the workshop.

At least one author of each accepted paper must register with the workshop and present the paper in order to be included in the proceedings.

Program committee

Steering committee