Call For Papers

BNCOD 2010

27th International Conference on Information Systems

29th June - 1st July 2010

University of Abertay Dundee, UK

http://www.bncod2010.org

2010 Special Theme - "Data Security & Security Data"


Important Dates

Abstract Submission:

22nd January 2010

Paper Submission:

29th January 2010

Workshop and Demonstration Proposals:

12th February 2010

Notification of Acceptance:

1st March 2010

Camera-ready Papers:

29th March 2010

Author Registration:

29th March 2010

PhD Forum Paper Submission:

7th May 2010

PhD Forum Notification of Acceptance:

21st May 2010

Early Bird Registration:

1st June 2010

PhD Forum Author Registration:

1st June 2010

PhD Forum Camera-ready Papers:

6th June 2010

Workshops:

28th June 2010

Conference:

29th June - 1st July 2010

Conference Overview

The British National Conference on Databases (BNCOD) was established in 1980 as a forum for research into the theory and practice of databases and, since then, BNCOD has become an international information systems conference and has attracted an international audience to discuss the leading research topics of the day in the field. The conference always invites papers on all topics related to data, information and knowledge representation, manipulation and management, while also each year promoting a special theme, seen to be of particular interest to the community at that time. 

The special theme of BNCOD 2010, the 27th in the series, is "Data Security & Security Data". The topic of data security has become ever more important in recent years, with the growth of pervasive and ubiquitous systems resulting in ever more individual, personal and business critical data being accessible through web-based systems. In what seem to be ever-increasing numbers, we hear of hacking events, data loss through software and hardware failures, and human error in corrupting systems or misplacing devices containing critical data. These reported issues have considerable impact, particularly in relation to considerations of data privacy and trust, which are already very sensitive and difficult areas in terms of public perceptions. Solutions in this area often have as much to do with social engineering and psychology as they do with technology, but the creation and protection of secure trusted systems in which critical information can be shown to be safe and privacy protected is of significant interest and importance to the BNCOD community. Alongside this issue, but not to be confused with it, runs the issue of Security Data, predominantly associated with  the means by which we ensure access to systems and individual datasets is controlled, manageable and traceable. Password systems, data encryption systems, secure communications, and fail-safe protocols are all well-known topics in this area, but issues of identity verification, secure digital sign-off, user traceability, and the issues of Security Data v. Data Protection legislation are all current hot topics that would be of considerable interest to the conference audience.

In addition to the usual broad range of database and information systems topics covered by the conference (shown below) therefore, this year there will be a special theme considering the issues of Data Security, Privacy and Trust on the one hand, and Security Data on the other. Papers on these topics are invited from researchers and specialists working in any area where these issues are prevalent, and we would particularly encourage individuals or groups who have not previously submitted to BNCOD or seen it as relevant to their work to consider submitting a paper. 

Papers and Submission

BNCOD 2010 Programme Committee invites submissions of substantial, original and previously unpublished research in all fields of databases and related areas for the Technical Programme of the conference. Full papers (12 pages), short papers (8 pages) and poster papers (4 pages) can be submitted.

We further invite submission of proposals for Workshops, for Demonstrations of research and commercial systems and for a pre-conference PhD Forum for PhD students.

As reviewing for BNCOD 2010 will be blind, all papers for submissions to the main conference should be anonymised.

All papers will be published in the conference proceedings, as in previous years, by Springer in the Lecture Notes in Computer Science (LNCS) series. 

Papers should be submitted electronically by following the submission instructions on the conference website.

Topics of Interest

Topics of interest include, but are not limited to: