1st International Workshop on Peer-to-Peer Systems (IPTPS'02)

From: PanOS TRIMINTZIOS (p.trimintzios@eim.surrey.ac.uk)
Date: Fri Oct 05 2001 - 12:42:06 CEST

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      The 1st International Workshop on Peer-to-Peer Systems (IPTPS'02)

                                7-8 March, 2002
                     MIT Faculty Club, Cambridge, MA, USA.

                  http://www.cs.rice.edu/Conferences/IPTPS02/

    Peer-to-peer has emerged as a promising new paradigm for distributed
    computing. The 1st International Workshop on Peer-to-Peer Systems
    (IPTPS'02) aims to provide a forum for researchers active in
    peer-to-peer computing to discuss the state-of-the-art and to identify
    key research challenges in peer-to-peer computing.

    The goal of the workshop is to examine peer-to-peer technologies,
    applications and systems, and also to identify key research issues and
    challenges that lie ahead. In the context of this workshop,
    peer-to-peer systems are characterized as being decentralized,
    self-organizing distributed systems, in which all or most
    communication is symmetric. Topics of interest include, but are not
    limited to:

       * novel peer-to-peer applications and systems
       * peer-to-peer infrastructure
       * security in peer-to-peer systems
       * anonymity and anti-censorship
       * performance of peer-to-peer systems
       * workload characterization for peer-to-peer systems

    The program of the workshop will be a combination of invited review
    talks, presentations of position papers, and discussions. To ensure
    a productive workshop environment, attendance will be limited to about
    35 participants who are active in the field. Each potential
    participant should submit a position paper of 5 pages or less that
    exposes a new problem, advocates a specific solution, or reports on
    actual experience. Participants will be invited based on the
    originality, technical merit and topical relevance of their submissions,
    as well as the likelihood that the ideas expressed in their submissions
    will lead to insightful technical discussions at the workshop. Please
    do not submit abbreviated versions of journal or conference papers.

    Online copies of the position papers will be made available prior to
    the workshop. We are investigating the possibility of producing a
    printed proceedings, including a summary of the interactions at the
    workshop, which would be mailed to participants after the workshop.

    Steering committee:

    Peter Druschel, Rice University, USA
    Frans Kaashoek, MIT, USA
    Antony Rowstron, Microsoft Research, UK
    Scott Shenker, ACIRI, Berkeley, USA
    Ion Stoica, UC Berkeley, USA

    Organizing chairs:

    Frans Kaashoek, MIT, USA
    Antony Rowstron, Microsoft Research, UK

    Program Committee:

    Ross Anderson, Cambridge University, UK
    Roger Dingledine, Reputation Technologies, Inc., USA
    Peter Druschel, Rice University, USA (co-chair)
    Steve Gribble, University of Washington, USA
    David Karger, MIT, USA
    John Kubiatowicz, UC Berkeley, USA
    Robert Morris, MIT, USA
    Antony Rowstron, Microsoft Research, UK (co-chair)
    Avi Rubin, AT&T Labs - Research, USA
    Scott Shenker, ACIRI, Berkeley, USA
    Ion Stoica, UC Berkeley, USA

    Guidelines for Submission:

    To submit, authors should follow the instructions at
    http://www.cs.rice.edu/Conferences/IPTPS02/submit/. Papers must be
    submitted by 18:00 GMT, Monday, 3 December 2001. The length of the
    paper must not exceed 5 pages (11pt font, 1 inch margins). All
    submissions will be acknowledged by email within 24 hours of receipt.

    Important Dates:

       * 3 December 2001 : Submission of position papers
       * 4 February 2002 : Notification of Acceptance/Rejection
       * 1 March 2002 : Final copies of accepted papers
       * 7-8 March 2002 : IPTPS'02



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