Program
Program
Sunday, September 28
FIS will host 4 half-day tutorials and 2 full-day workshops which will be held on Sunday, September 28. Following slots are planned:
1) morning slot (09:00-12:30) incl. coffee break (10:30-11:00)
2) afternoon slot (14:00-17:30) incl. coffee break (15:30-16:00)
Lunch will be provided within 12:30-14:00.
| Tutorial 1: | Triple Space Computing: Large-Scale Integrated Knowledge Applications (half-day) |
| Tutorial 2: | Beyond Google Earth: Surfing Petabyte Maps in the Future Internet (half-day) |
| Tutorial 3: | Agile Future Internet Applications: An Introduction to Emerging Data, Service, and Process Technologies (half-day) |
| Tutorial 4: | Supporting Business Processes in a Future Internet with BPM, Semantics and Services (half-day) |
| Workshop 1: | OneSpace2008 - 1st International Workshop on Blending Physical and Digital Spaces on the Internet (full-day) |
| Workshop 2: | 1st International Workshop on Complex Event Processing for Future Internet - Realizing Reactive Future Internet (full-day) |
Monday, September 29 and Tuesday, September 30
The conference will start on Monday at 09:00 with the keynote of João da Silva and will finish on Tuesday at 12:30. FIS 2008 will also include a number of invited papers in addition to our refereed papers.
Invited Papers
The Internet of Things in an Enterprise Context
Authors:
Stephan Haller, SAP Research, Zürich, Switzerland
Stamatis Karnouskos, SAP Research, Karlsruhe, Germany
Christoph Schroth, SAP Research, St. Gallen, Switzerland

Speaker:
Stephan Haller
Stephan Haller is a Senior Researcher and Architect in the Smart Items Research Program at SAP Research in Zürich, Switzerland. He has been working on technologies relating to the Internet of Things for many years and as such is deeply involved in European research activities in this area. He is currently leading the IST SENSEI project, which is concerned with integrating wireless sensor networks into the network of the future. Before, he was the project lead of CoBIs, which developed a service-oriented architecture to deploy business logic to the network edge, e.g., to wireless sensor networks.
Stephan initiated RFID research & development activities at SAP in 1998, which led to the SAP Auto-ID Infrastructure. He was a co-chair of the Reader Protocol working group at EPCglobal, and also worked as technical consultant on several RFID customer projects like the Metro Future Store and Fraport.
Before joining SAP in Tokyo in 1997, Stephan worked for 3 years as a research engineer at Matsushita Electric Works' Central Research Laboratory in Osaka, Japan, in the area of distributed information systems. He holds a master's degree in Computer Science from the Federal Institute of Technology (ETH) in Zürich, Switzerland.
Security-By-Contract for the Future Internet
Authors:
Fabio Massacci, University of Trento, Italy
Frank Piessens, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, Belgium
Ida Siahaan, University of Trento, Italy

Speaker:
Fabio Massacci
Fabio Massacci is born in 1967 and is married with two sons. He received a M.Eng. in 1993 and Ph.D. in Computer Science and Engineering at University of Rome "La Sapienza" in 1998. He spent an year in Cambridge working with L. Paulson and R. Needham on security protocols verification. He joined University of Siena as Assistant Professor in 1999, and was visiting researcher at IRIT Toulouse in 2000, and joined Trento in 2001 where is now full professor. His research interests are in security requirements engineering, formal methods and computer security. He co-authored a number of papers on peer-reviewed journals and international conferences. His h-index on Google Scholar is 20, and his h-index normalized for individual impact (hI_norm) is 13 (in June/2008).
He is currently scientific coordinator of R&D European Integrated projects on security and compliance and is negotiating another integrated project on security engineering for change. Currently he is program chair of a Security Enginneering conference technically sponsored by ACM SIGSAC and ACM SIGSOFT (http://distrinet.cs.kuleuven.be/events/essos2009/)
As deputy rector for ICT procurements and services, a past-time with 70 members of staff and 3M€ yearly budget, he has the incredible advantage for a computer scientist of being also a customer of IT solutions. A position that enable him to be the users'scapegoat for industry solutions that never really works as advertised, and thus spurs him to new research ideas.
In a parallel life, he has been very active in voluntary service and was elected for 4 years in the European Executive Committee of Service Civil International, an international NGO with consultative status at UNESCO, the Council of Europe and the European Youth Forum. He sat in the national committee of a major tax objection campaign against military expences in Italy and was volunteer in refugees camps in former Yugoslavia.


