NIS'10 (September 2010, Crete, Greece)
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Prof. João Barros

Prof. João Barros

Bio:
João Barros is an Associate Professor at the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering of the School of Engineering of the University of Porto and the coordiynator of the Porto Laboratory of the Instituto de Telecomunicações. He is also a Research Affiliate with the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). In February 2009, Dr. Barros was appointed National Director of the CMU-Portugal Program, a five-year international partnership between Carnegie Mellon University and 12 Portuguese Universities and Research Institutions, with a total budget of 56M Euros. He received his undergraduate education in Electrical and Computer Engineering from the Universidade do Porto (UP), Portugal and Universitaet Karlsruhe, Germany, until 1999, and the Ph.D. degree in Electrical Engineering and Information Technology from the Technische Universitaet Muenchen (TUM), Germany, in 2004. From 2005 to 2008, João Barros was an assistant professor at the Department of Computer Science of the School of Sciences of the University of Porto. The focus of his research lies in the general areas of information theory, communication networks and data security. Dr. Barros received a Best Teaching Award from the Bavarian State Ministry of Sciences, Research and the Arts, as well as scholarships from several institutions, including the Fulbright Commission and the Luso-American Foundation. He held visiting positions at Cornell University and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where he spent a sabbatical in 2008. Beyond his duties as Secretary of the Board of Governors of the IEEE Information Theory Society, his service included co-chairing the 2008 IEEE Information Theory Workshop in Porto, Portugal, and participating in several Technical Program Committees, including ITW 2009, WiOpt (2008 and 2009), ISIT 2007, IS 2007, and IEEE Globecom (2007 and 2008).


Sensors, Vehicles and Things: Can We Secure the New Species on the Internet Landscape?

Abstract:
As the Internet evolves into an immense jungle of people, computers, mobile devices, sensors, vehicles and networked infrastructures, bringing forward unexpected technologies, applications, products and services, the proposed security sub-systems seem strangely "deja vu", relying on variations of established techniques such as hashing, symmetric encryption, public-key cryptography or access control policies. But is this really all that it takes to secure the internet of things, smart grids or intelligent transportation systems, to name just a few of the envisioned future internet environments? In this lecture, we shall address this question from various angles by looking at case studies such as vehicular networking, distributed sensing, network coding and physical-layer security. Our ultimate goal is to point at ways to ensure that such technologies can be well integrated in the (hopefully) secure internet of the future.