Difference between revisions of "Event:SMGSSP 2017"

From ConfIDent
(mobo import Concept___Events_With_Academic_Fields-migrated)
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|Acronym=SMGSSP 2017
 
|Acronym=SMGSSP 2017
 
|Title=SMGSSP  2017: Smart Micro-Grid Systems Security and Privacy
 
|Title=SMGSSP  2017: Smart Micro-Grid Systems Security and Privacy
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|Single Day Event=no
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|Start Date=2016/10/15
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|End Date=2018/03/31
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|Academic Field=Cyber-Physical Systems; Privacy; Security; Smart Microgrids
 
|Type=Conference
 
|Type=Conference
 
|Country=Germany
 
|Country=Germany
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|pageEditor=Omid.nn
 
|pageEditor=Omid.nn
 
|contributionType=1
 
|contributionType=1
|Single Day Event=no
 
|Start Date=2016-10-15T00:00:00
 
|End Date=2018-03-31T23:59:59
 
|Academic Field=Privacy;Security;Smart Micro-Grids;Cyber-Physical Systems
 
 
}}
 
}}
 
 
Smart grids offer a cost-effective approach to fair and equitable power provisioning in urban areas.
 
Smart grids offer a cost-effective approach to fair and equitable power provisioning in urban areas.
 
Applying smart grids to rural and remote areas that have no and/or intermittent access to national
 
Applying smart grids to rural and remote areas that have no and/or intermittent access to national

Revision as of 09:03, 1 September 2022

Smart grids offer a cost-effective approach to fair and equitable power provisioning in urban areas. Applying smart grids to rural and remote areas that have no and/or intermittent access to national power networks, can be both expensive and logistically challenging. Smart microgrids offer a suitable alternative but much be architected to protect against energy theft and privacy violation attacks. Protecting against both aspects is important in guaranteeing grid usability, trust, and reliability which are needed to ensure grid stability. For economic reasons, such smart microgrid architectures are designed to rely on distributed energy sources coordinated via a communication network based on low-cost processing power poor computational devices. As such, the microgrid is reliant on an amorphous distributed model of users who agree to cooperate to share electricity. The absence of a central trusted grid monitoring and management facility, therefore, requires a shift in conceptualization from the standard grid model.

We welcome book chapter contributions centered (but not exclusively) on the following themes: 1. Smart Micro-Grid Architectures 2. Authentication and Authorization Models 3. Security and Privacy-Aware Resource Allocation 4. Trust-Centric Metering and Billing 5. Priority-Based Scheduling 6. Economic Models for Power Distribution 7. Attack Models and Countermeasures 8. Privacy Models

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