[Storage-research-list] Fwd: [msst] MSST2008 Workshop submissions due May 30, 2008

Jack Cole jack.cole at ieee.org
Sun May 25 16:57:36 EDT 2008


---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Ben Kobler <ben.kobler at nasa.gov>
Date: Fri, May 23, 2008 at 1:13 PM
Subject: [msst] MSST2008 Workshop submissions due May 30, 2008
To: msst at ieee.org


MSST2008
25th IEEE Symposium on
Massive Storage Systems and Technologies

Sheraton Inner Harbor
Baltimore, Maryland
September 22 - 25, 2008
http://storageconference.org

This is a reminder that submissions to the following MSST2008 workshops are
due May 30, 2008:

• CMPD'08, Workshop on Computing with Massive and Persistent Data. Chairs:
Maya Gokhale and Steve Louis. Emerging hardware technologies such as low
latency non-volatile memory and specialized co-processors offer new
opportunities to accelerate data and compute intensive applications. The
CMPD'08 workshop will assemble a broad range of researchers and
practitioners to establish a community that crosses traditional boundaries
separating hardware, system software, and applications. Areas of interest
include disk-scale non-volatile memory devices, hardware co-processor
approaches for computing with massive data sets, file systems and other
system software for massive data sets, novel programming models for
data-intensive applications, and applications using massive and persistent
data. Prospective authors should submit an abstract of their current work or
a short position paper not to exceed 4 single-spaced pages, to: cmpd08-
workshop at llnl.gov, by May 30, 2008. More information is available here:
https://computation.llnl.gov/home/workshops/cmpd08/

• DAPS'08, Workshop on Digital Archive Preservation and Sustainability.
Chair: Ann Kerr. Long term preservation requires the ability to make
assertions about governance, sustainability, and trustworthiness.  These
concerns involve evolution of the community policies under which records are
preserved, institutional commitment towards maintaining the preservation
environment, and continued verification of the authenticity and integrity of
records.  As archives grow to the scale of hundreds of petabytes, these
assertions become incompatible. This workshop will explore the inherent
tensions in minimizing cost while ensuring sustainability, increasing
governance controls while collection sizes grow, and improving integrity and
authenticity assertions as the number of records increases. It will also
explore existing and emerging digital preservation requirements and
evolution of architectures. Prospective participants should submit an
abstract of their current work or a short position paper not to exceed 4
single-spaced pages, to: chair at san.rr.com, by May 30, 2008. More information
is available here: http://storageconference.org/daps/index.html

• KMS2008, IEEE Key Management Summit. Chair: Matt Ball. With recent
legislation, such as California's SB 1386 or Sarbanes-Oxley, companies now
have to publicly disclose when they lose unencrypted personal data.  To meet
this new need for encryption, many companies have developed solutions that
encrypt data on hard disks and tape cartridges.  The problem is that these
data storage vendors need a solution for managing the cryptographic keys
that protect the encrypted data. KMS2008 will bring together the top
companies that develop cryptographic key management for storage devices with
the standards organizations that make interoperability possible. The summit
aims to provide clarity to the key management by showing how existing
products and standards organizations address the problem of interoperability
and security. Prospective speakers should submit an abstract to:
chair at keymanagementsummit.com,  by May 30, 2008. Relevant topics include:
key management standards, use-cases, solutions, and government requirements.
More information is available here: http://www.keymanagementsummit.com/2008/

• SISW 2008, 5th IEEE International Security In Storage Workshop. Chair: Jim
Hughes. Protecting intellectual property, privacy, health records, and
military secrets when media or devices are lost, stolen, or captured is
critical to information owners. But meeting the challenge of protecting
stored information critical to individuals, corporations, and governments is
difficult, given the continually changing uses of storage, and the exposure
of storage media to adverse conditions. SISW serves as an open forum for
discussion of storage threats, technologies, methodologies, and deployment,
and disseminates new research by bringing together researchers and
practitioners from both government and civilian areas. Prospective
participants should submit either a full paper (not to exceed 12
single-spaced pages) for a paper presentation to be published in the
proceedings, or a short abstract suggesting alternative presentation forms,
discussion items, or panel topics to: james.hughes at sun.com, by May 30, 2008.
More information is available here: http://ieeeia.org/sisw/2008/
___________________________________________________________________
ben.kobler at nasa.gov, NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, 301-286-5231
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