SaTC 2019
Date: Oct 28, 2019 6:00 am – Oct 29, 2019 5:00 pm
Location: Alexandria, Virginia
The fourth biennial NSF Secure and Trustworthy CyberSpace Principal Investigators’ Meeting (SaTC PI Meeting ’19) will be held Monday, October 28 starting at 8:00 a.m. through 3:30 p.m. Tuesday, October 29, 2019 at the Hilton Alexandria Mark Center, located at 5000 Seminary Rd, Alexandria, VA 22311. The Hilton Alexandria Mark Center is 8.2 miles from the Reagan Washington National Airport (DCA) and 4.7 miles from NSF via Seminary Road.
Please plan to attend the light evening reception on arrival night of Sunday, October 27.
A total fee of $160.76 (includes a $150 registration fee + $10.76 processing fee) will be required to attend this meeting.
Meeting registration is live through Monday, September 30, 2019
Poster Submission will close on Tuesday, October 1, 2019
The program agenda has been posted
The NSF SaTC PI Meeting is a biennial forum of the SaTC research community with leading experts from academia, industry, and Federal agencies, who will come together to discuss game changing challenges resulting from the global adoption of cyberspace by:
Reviewing new developments in SaTC fundamental ideas and concepts that minimize the misuses of cybersecurity
Discussing ways to bolster education and training in cybersercurity
Identifying new, emerging applications
Transitioning promising research into practice
The National Science Foundation established the SaTC program to protect cyber-systems (including host machines, the internet and other cyber-infrastructure) from malicious behavior, while preserving privacy and promoting usability. The SaTC program supports a broad spectrum of innovative research that will improve the resilience of individual hosts, networked systems, hardware, software, applications and critical infrastructure from malicious cyber-attacks while preserving privacy and promoting effective and safe usability. SaTC recognizes that this is not only a problem of developing trustworthy computing technology, but also of understanding the economic, social, and behavioral factors that affect its use and deployment. Addressing this problem requires multi-disciplinary expertise in human, statistical, mathematical, computational, and computer sciences and ultimately the transition of new concepts and technologies to practice, as well will require the expertise and resources from a wide range of disciplines, including computer science, engineering, economics mathematics, and behavioral sciences. Forerunners of the SaTC program include the Trustworthy Computing, Cyber-Trust, and Trusted Computing programs.
The program of the meeting includes invited keynotes and PI talks, panels, and breakout discussions about SaTC research-related projects funded by NSF and other Federal agencies. The program will be organized by a program committee comprising SaTC community experts identified by NSF.
The NSF SaTC Program's public solicitation can be found at: https://www.nsf.gov/funding/pgm_summ.jsp?pims_id=504709
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The fourth biennial NSF Secure and Trustworthy CyberSpace Principal Investigators’ Meeting (SaTC PI Meeting ’19) will be held Monday, October 28 starting at 8:00 a.m. through 3:30 p.m. Tuesday, October 29, 2019 at the Hilton Alexandria Mark Center, located at 5000 Seminary Rd, Alexandria, VA 22311. The Hilton Alexandria Mark Center is 8.2 miles from the Reagan Washington National Airport (DCA) and 4.7 miles from NSF via Seminary Road.
Please plan to attend the light evening reception on arrival night of Sunday, October 27.
A total fee of $160.76 (includes a $150 registration fee + $10.76 processing fee) will be required to attend this meeting.
Meeting registration is live through Monday, September 30, 2019
Poster Submission will close on Tuesday, October 1, 2019
The program agenda has been posted
The NSF SaTC PI Meeting is a biennial forum of the SaTC research community with leading experts from academia, industry, and Federal agencies, who will come together to discuss game changing challenges resulting from the global adoption of cyberspace by:
Reviewing new developments in SaTC fundamental ideas and concepts that minimize the misuses of cybersecurity
Discussing ways to bolster education and training in cybersercurity
Identifying new, emerging applications
Transitioning promising research into practice
The National Science Foundation established the SaTC program to protect cyber-systems (including host machines, the internet and other cyber-infrastructure) from malicious behavior, while preserving privacy and promoting usability. The SaTC program supports a broad spectrum of innovative research that will improve the resilience of individual hosts, networked systems, hardware, software, applications and critical infrastructure from malicious cyber-attacks while preserving privacy and promoting effective and safe usability. SaTC recognizes that this is not only a problem of developing trustworthy computing technology, but also of understanding the economic, social, and behavioral factors that affect its use and deployment. Addressing this problem requires multi-disciplinary expertise in human, statistical, mathematical, computational, and computer sciences and ultimately the transition of new concepts and technologies to practice, as well will require the expertise and resources from a wide range of disciplines, including computer science, engineering, economics mathematics, and behavioral sciences. Forerunners of the SaTC program include the Trustworthy Computing, Cyber-Trust, and Trusted Computing programs.
The program of the meeting includes invited keynotes and PI talks, panels, and breakout discussions about SaTC research-related projects funded by NSF and other Federal agencies. The program will be organized by a program committee comprising SaTC community experts identified by NSF.
The NSF SaTC Program's public solicitation can be found at: https://www.nsf.gov/funding/pgm_summ.jsp?pims_id=504709