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Meeting the challenge to protect stored information critical to individuals, corporations, and governments is made more difficult by the continually changing uses of storage and the exposure of storage media to adverse conditions. Example uses include employment of large shared storage systems for cost reduction and, for convenience, wide use of transiently-connected storage devices offering significant capacities and manifested in many forms, often embedded in mobile devices. Protecting intellectual property, privacy, health records, and military secrets when media or devices are lost, stolen, or captured is critical to information owners. A comprehensive, systems approach to storage security is required for the activities that rely on storage technology to remain or become viable. This workshop serves as an open forum to discuss storage threats, technologies, methodologies and deployment. The workshop seeks submissions from academia and industry presenting novel research on all theoretical and practical aspects of designing, building and managing secure storage systems; possible topics include, but are not limited to the following:
The goal of the workshop is to disseminate new research, and to bring together researchers and practitioners from both governmental and civilian areas. Accepted papers will be published by the IEEE Computer Society Press in the workshop proceedings and become part of the IEEE Digital Library. General Chair:
Jack Cole,
US Army
Research Laboratory, USA |
updated Thursday, May 24, 2007
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