Workshop: Intelligent and Secure Wireless Communications

#Wireless #communications #Intelligence #Security
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The goal of this workshop is to provide an opportunity for researchers to discuss their latest works. We invited two keynote speakers and five volunteers to give talks in the area of intelligent and secure wireless communications. Four volunteers have been registered, and only one position is left. If any researcher has interest in this opportunity to share his/her current works, please contact us (He Fang, Vice Chair hfang42@uwo.ca). IEEE London  Communication & Broadcast Chapter will select the best presentation and provide a reward (gift card). 



  Date and Time

  Location

  Hosts

  Registration



  • Date: 15 Jul 2021
  • Time: 10:00 AM to 12:15 PM
  • All times are (GMT-05:00) America/Toronto
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  • LONDON, Ontario
  • Canada

  • Contact Event Host
  • Starts 01 July 2021 05:00 AM
  • Ends 16 July 2021 12:14 AM
  • All times are (GMT-05:00) America/Toronto
  • No Admission Charge


  Speakers

Prof. Stefano Tomasin

Topic:

User authentication by received radio signals

Ensuring that a received message comes from the declared sender and has not been generated by an attacker impersonating the sender is an essential security feature, denoted authentication. Due to the growing number of connected devices with several computational and energy limitations, new authentication techniques can  integrate cryptography approaches. In a wireless network, the features of the received radio signal (such as intensity, presence of echoes, and Doppler) are characteristics of the transmitter and receiver positions, and may be exploited for user authentication purposes. We will define the authentication problem by radio signal and see the main directions used to solve it, considering the specific characteristics of signal propagation.

Biography:

Stefano Tomasin (Senior Member, IEEE) received the Ph.D. degree in telecommunications engineering from the University of Padua, Italy, in 2003. He is currently an Associate Professor with the University of Padua. He has been on leave at Philips Research, Eindhoven, The Netherlands, in 2002; Qualcomm Research Laboratories, San Diego, CA, USA, in 2004; Polytechnic University, Brooklyn, NY, USA, in 2007; and the Huawei Mathematical and Algorithmic Sciences Laboratory, Boulogne-Billancourt, France, in 2015. His current research interests include physical layer security and signal processing for wireless communications, with application to 5th generation cellular systems. Since 2011, he has been an Editor of the EURASIP Journal on Wireless Communications and Networking. From 2011 to 2017, he was an Editor of the IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON VEHICULAR TECHNOLOGY. Since 2016, he has been an Editor of the IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON SIGNAL PROCESSING. Since 2020, he has been an Editor of the IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON INFORMATION FORENSICS AND SECURITY.

Address:Italy

Prof. Jianting Ning

Topic:

Towards Efficient Privacy-Preserving Inspection of TLS Encrypted Traffic

Network middleboxes perform deep packet inspection to detect anomalies and suspicious activities in network traffic. However, increasingly these traffic are encrypted and middleboxes can no longer make sense of them. This raises the problem of privacy-preserving inspection on TLS encrypted traffic. In this talk, I will first introduce the need for TLS traffic inspection and the problem with the existing approach. Three recent proposals, namely Blindbox, PrivDPI and Pine, will be then introduced. Finally, I will present conclusion and future direction.

Biography:

Jianting Ning received the Ph.D. degree from the Department of Computer Science and Engineering, Shanghai Jiao Tong University in 2016. He is currently a Professor with the Fujian Provincial Key Laboratory of Network Security and Cryptology, College of Computer and Cyber Security, Fujian Normal University, China. Previously, he was a research scientist at School of Information Systems, Singapore Management University and a research fellow at Department of Computer Science, National University of Singapore. His research interests include applied cryptography and information security. He has published papers in major conferences/journals such as ACM CCS, ESORICS, ACSAC, IEEE TIFS, IEEE TDSC, etc.

Address:Fujian, China






Agenda

IEEE Workshop "Intelligent and Secure Wireless Communications"

July 15th, 2021 10:00-12:10 pm

Time                       Speaker                            Talk title
10:00-10:25 am      Prof. Jianting Ning            Towards Efficient Privacy-Preserving Inspection of TLS Encrypted Traffic
10:26-10:50 am      Prof. Stefano Tomasin       User authentication by received radio signals
10:51-11:05 am      Shengmin Xu                    Expressive Bilateral Access Control for Internet-of-Things in Cloud-Fog Computing
11:06-11:20 am      Min Gao                            Seed-based density clustering method for community detection in social networks
11:21-11:35 am      Huanchi Wang                  Edge Intelligence Enabled Soft Authentication in UAV Swarm
11:36-11:50 am      Jiazhi Chen                        An Efficient Trust Establishment Model for Developing Collaboration Efficiency in Internet of Vehicles
11:51-12:10 pm      Mouhamed Abdulla         Latency of Concatenating Unlicensed LPWAN with Cellular IoT: An Experimental QoE Study

See the expanded agenda attached to Media section at the bottom of the Events page.



  Media

Agenda-IEEE_Workshop_July_15__2021 202.61 KiB