Deploying mission-critical computer systems at locations where they can only be 
managed remotely is increasingly becoming a necessary requirement of real-world 
systems design. Thus there is a practical demand for the so-called "self-aware 
autonomous trusted" systems capable of


   - monitoring their own state in order to distinguish "good" states

     from inconsistent ones,


   - automatically "fixing themselves", i.e., restoring their state to

     a known good one when it become "bad" (exploited) or

     inconsistent, and


   - attesting their current state to a remote party, so that, e.g., a

     remote administrator can be reasonably sure that he is observing

     actual reports of the system's state rather than an elaborate

     deception produced by a rootkit. It is important that this should

     be achieved without destroying the general-purpose vendor-neutral

     character of the platform.


Unfortunately, modern general-purpose computing platforms fall short in most of 
these requirements.


ATC-08 invites research papers and case studies that suggest innovative ways to 
design such systems. The full CFP is available at 
http://www.ux.uis.no/atc08/ATC08CFP.txt

Reply via email to