3rd Workshop on Trusted Smart Contracts

In Association with Financial Cryptography 2019

February 22, 2019

St. Kitts Marriott Resort
St. Kitts

Call for Papers

Smart contracts, an highly transformational technology, are self-enforcing agreements in the form of executable programs that are deployed to and run on top of blockchains.

Several proposals have developed the idea of algorithmic validation of decentralised trust, along Szabo's intuition.The first significant example was the Ethereum blockchain. A myriad of possible further directions have been proposed, many of them are in active development.

These technologies introduce a novel programming framework and execution environment, which are not satisfactorily understood at the moment. Multidisciplinary and multifactorial aspects affect correctness, safety, privacy, authentication, efficiency, sustainability, resilience and trust in smart contracts.

Existing frameworks, which are competing for their market share, adopt different solutions to issues like the above ones. Merits of proposed solutions are still to be fully evaluated and compared by means of systematic scientific investigation, and further research is needed towards laying the foundations of Trusted Smart Contracts.

A non-exhaustive list of topics of interest, open problems and future directions includes:

- validation and definition of the programming abstractions and execution model,
- validation and definition of the programming abstractions and execution model,
- verification of the properties expected to be enforced by smart contracts,
- incentives, governance, participatory models, and implications on smart contracts,
- resilience of the consensus/validation/mining/execution model,
- fairness and decentralisation of contracts and their management,
- rewards, economics and sustainability/stability of the framework,
- off-chain interaction and context,
- sharding, concurrency, and parallelism in smart contracts,
- effects of consensus mechanisms and proof-of mechanisms on smart contracts,
- game-theoretic approaches for security and validation,
- digital and ring signature
- multiparty computation and homomorphic encryption for the privacy of smart contract execution
- privacy and privacy-preserving contracts,
- authentication and anonymity management,
- oblivious transfer,
- data provenance,
- access rights,
- foundations of software engineering for smart contracts,
- blockchain data analysis,
- comparison of the permissioned and non-permissioned scenarios,
- use cases and killer applications of smart contracts,
- regulation and law enforcement,
- future outlook on smart contract technologies.


WTSC focuses on smart contracts as an application layer on top of blockchains, however aspects of the underlying supporting blockchains clearly become relevant in so much as they affect properties of the smart contracts, and are of great interest for WTSC.

WTSC aims to gather together researchers from both academia and industry interested in the many facets of Trusted Smart Contract engineering, and to provide a multi-disciplinary forum for discussing open problems, proposed solutions and the vision on future developments.

Associated to Financial Cryptography, a recognised premiere conference for the blockchain world, WTSC aims to become a reference venue for the discussion of cutting-edge smart contracts and associated blockchain technologies.

Experts in fields including (but not limited to!):

- programming languages,
- verification,
- security,
- software engineering,
- decision and game theory,
- cryptography,
- finance and economics,
- monetary systems,
- regulations and law.

as well as, practitioners and companies interested in blockchain technologies, are invited to submit their findings, case studies and reports on open problems for presentation at the workshop, take part in this second edition of WTSC and make it a lively forum.

Invited Speakers

Ian Grigg

“On Trust”

www.iang.org

Igor Artamonov (Splix)

“Why Decentralization is important for Secure and Reliable Smart Contracts?”

Ethereum Classic - ETCDEV Founder

Important Dates

WTSC adopts this year a novel submission schedule with double deadline. A first deadline will allow authors to plan their participation well in advance. A second deadline will allow authors who need extra time to develop their contributions, to have a further opportunity to participate. Selected borderline papers from the first deadline will be considered for and also allowed to resubmit to the second deadline.

Abstract registration is kindly requested in advance for both deadlines.

Abstract Registration December 14, 2018
Paper Submission Deadline December 20, 2018
Early Author Notification January 10, 2019
Late Abstract Registration January 8, 2019
Late Submission Deadline January 15, 2018
Late Author Notification January 28, 2019
Early registration deadline TBA
Final Papers TBA
WTSC February 22, 2019
Financial Cryptography February 18 - 22, 2019

Submission

WTSC solicits submissions of manuscripts that represent significant and novel research contributions. Submissions must not substantially overlap with works that have been published or that are simultaneously submitted to a journal or a conference with proceedings.

Submissions should follow the Springer Lecture Notes in Computer Science format and should be no more than 15 pages including references and appendices. Papers may also be in a short format, no more than 8 pages including references and appendices.

In-progress work and developing ideas can be submitted as a poster.

Also "Systemization of Knowledge" papers will be accepted and have a page limit of 15 pages but *excluding* references. These should be marked "SoK:".

Accepted papers will appear in the proceedings published by Springer Lecture Notes in Computer Science. Authors who seek to submit their works to journals may opt-out by publishing an extended abstract only.

All submissions will be reviewed double-blind, and as such, must be anonymous, with no author names, affiliations, acknowledgements, or obvious references.

Submission Page

Contributions can be submitted at this link.

Program Chairs

Andrea Bracciali University of Stirling, UK
Federico Pintore University of Oxford, UK
Massimiliano SalaUniversity of Trento, IT

Program Committee

Igor Artamonov Ethereum Classic Dev
Bob Atkey Strathclyde University, UK
Marcella Atzori UCL, UK / IFIN, IT
Daniel Augot INRIA, FR
Massimo Bartoletti University of Cagliari, IT
Devraj Basu Strathclyde University, UK
Stefano Bistarelli University of Perugia, IT
Christina Boura Versailles SQT Univ., FR
Daniel Broby Strathclyde University, UK
Bill Buchanan Napier University, UK
James Chapman IOHK, HK
Martin Chapman King’s College London, UK
Tiziana Cimoli University of Cagliari, IT
Nicola Dimitri University of Siena, IT
Nadia Fabrizio Cefriel, IT
Jamie Gabbay Heriot-Watt University, UK
Laetitia Gauvin ISI Foundation, IT
Neil Ghani Strathclyde University, UK
Oliver Giudice Banca d'Italia, IT
Davide Grossi University of Groningen, NL
Yoichi Hirai brainbot technologies AG, DE
Lars R. Knudsen Technical University of Denmark, DK
Ioannis Kounelis Joint Research Centre, European Commission, IT
Victoria Lemieux The University of British Columbia, CA
Loi Luu National University of Singapore, SG
Carsten Maple Warwick University, UK
Michele Marchesi University of Cagliari, IT
Fabio Martinelli IIT-CNR, IT
Patrick McCorry King's College London, UK
Neil McLaren ConsenSys, UK
Sihem Mesnager University of Paris VIII, FR
Philippe Meyer Avaloq, CH
Bud Mishra NYU, USA
Carlos Molina-Jimenez University of Cambridge, UK
Massimo Morini Banca IMI, IT
Immaculate Motsi University of Warwick, UK
Alex Norta Tallin University of Technology, EW
Jason Teutsch Truebit, USA
Roberto Tonelli University of Cagliari, IT
Luca Vigano' University of Verona, IT
Philip Wadler University of Edinburgh, UK
Yilei Wang Hong Kong Polytechnic University, HK
Ales Zamuda University of Maribor, SLO
Santiago Zanella-Beguelin Microsoft, UK







FC is organized annually by the International Financial Cryptography Association in cooperation with IACR.