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Introduction
As computer systems become increasingly large and complex, their Dependability, Security and Autonomy play critical role at supporting next-generation science, engineering, and commercial applications. These systems consist of heterogeneous software/hardware/network components of changing capacities, availability, and in varied contexts. They provide computing services to large pools of users and applications, and thus are exposed to a number of dangers such as accidental/deliberate faults, virus infections, malicious attacks, illegal intrusions, and natural disasters etc. As a result, too often computer systems fail, become compromised, or perform poorly and therefore untrustworthy. Thus, it remains a challenge to design, analyze, evaluate, and improve the dependability and security for a trusted computing environment. Trusted computing targets computing and communication systems as well as services that are autonomous, dependable, secure, privacy protect-able, predictable, traceable, controllable, assessable and sustainable. The scale and complexity of information systems evolve towards overwhelming the capability of system administrators, programmers, and designers. This calls for the autonomic computing paradigm, which meets the requirement of self-management by providing self-optimization, self-healing, self-configuration, and self-protection. As a promising means to implement dependable and secure systems in a self-managing manner, autonomic computing technology needs to be further explored. On the other hand, any autonomic system must be trustworthy to avoid the risk of losing control and retain confidence that the system will not fail. Trusted and autonomic computing and communications need synergistic research efforts covering many disciplines, ranging from computer science and engineering, to the natural sciences to the social sciences. It requires scientific and technological advances in a wide variety of fields, as well as new software, system architectures, and communication systems that support the effective and coherent integration of the constituent technologies. DASC 2014 is the conference event following DSAC 2013 (December 2013, Chengdu, China ) after the merger of the successful DASC symposium series previously held as RAMPDS 2005 (July 2005, Fukuoka, Japan), DASC 2006 (September 2006, Indianapolis, USA), DASC 2007 (September, 2007, Columbia, MD, USA), and the successful SecUbiq symposium series, previously held as SecUbiq 2005 (December 2005, Nagasaki, Japan), SecUbiq 2006 (August 2006, Seoul, Korea), SecUbiq 2007 (December 2007, Taipei, Chinese Taipei) and SecUbiq 2008 (December 2008, Shanghai, Shanghai), DASC 2009 (December 2009, Chengdu, China). DASC 2014 is to bring together computer scientists, industrial engineers, and researchers to discuss and exchange experimental and theoretical results, novel designs, work-in-progress, experience, case studies, and trend-setting ideas in the areas of dependability, security, trust and/or autonomic computing systems.
Call for paper

Important date

2014-04-20
Draft paper submission deadline

Submission Topics

Topics of particular interest include (but not limited to): Autonomic Computing Theory, Models, Architectures and Communications Cloud Computing with Autonomic and Trusted Environment Dependable Automatic Control Techniques and Systems Dependability
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Important Date
  • Conference Date

    Aug 24

    2014

    to

    Aug 27

    2014

  • Apr 20 2014

    Draft paper submission deadline

  • Aug 27 2014

    Registration deadline

Sponsored By
大连海事大学
Supported By
大连海事大学