[Agda] 1st CfP: FMBC 2025 - 6th International Workshop on Formal Methods for Blockchains

Orestis Melkonian melkon.or at gmail.com
Mon Dec 23 09:15:47 CET 2024


*6th International Workshop on Formal Methods for Blockchains - First 
Call for Papers*

https://fmbc.gitlab.io/2025

May 04, 2025, Hamilton, ON, Canada

Co-located with the European joint conferences on theory and practice of 
software (ETAPS 2025)

https://www.etaps.org/2025/

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    IMPORTANT DATES

Abstract submission: February 3rd, 2025
Full paper submission: February 10th, 2025
Notification: March 14th, 2025
Camera-ready: March 31st, 2025
Workshop: May 4th, 2025

Deadlines are Anywhere on Earth:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anywhere_on_Earth

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    TOPICS OF INTEREST

Blockchain is a novel technology to store data in a decentralized way.
Although the technology was originally invented to enable 
cryptocurrencies, it quickly found applications in several other domains.

Blockchains may also provide support for Smart Contracts. Smart 
Contracts are scripts of an ad-hoc programming language that are
stored in the blockchain and that run on the network. They can interact 
with the ledger’s data and update its state.
These scripts can express the logic of possibly complex contracts 
between users of the blockchain. Thus, Smart Contracts can facilitate
the economic activity of blockchain participants.

Since blockchains are often used to store financial transactions, bugs 
may result in huge economic losses and thus it is now of utmost
importance to have strong guarantees of the behaviour of blockchain 
software. These guarantees can be brought by using Formal Methods.
Indeed, Blockchain software encompasses many topics of computer science 
where using Formal Methods techniques and tools is relevant:
consensus algorithms to ensure the liveness and the security of the data 
on the chain, programming languages specifically designed to
write smart contracts, cryptographic protocols, such as zero-knowledge 
proofs, used to ensure privacy, etc.

This workshop is a forum to identify theoretical and practical 
approaches of formal methods for Blockchain technology.
Topics include, but are not limited to:

  * Formal models of Blockchain applications or concepts
  * Formal methods for consensus protocols
  * Formal methods for Blockchain-specific cryptographic primitives or
    protocols
  * Design and implementation of Smart Contract languages
  * Verification of Smart Contracts
  * Zero-knowledge proof and its applications in a blockchain setting

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    SUBMISSION

Submit original manuscripts (not published or considered elsewhere) with 
a page limit of 12 pages for full papers and 6 pages for short and tool 
papers
(excluding bibliography and short appendix of up to 5 additional pages).

Alternatively you may also submit an extended abstract of up to 3 pages 
(including bibliography) summarizing your ongoing work in the area of
formal methods and blockchain. Authors of selected extended-abstracts 
are invited to give a short lightning talk. Extended abstracts will not 
occur in
the workshop proceedings.

Submission link: https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=fmbc2025

Authors are encouraged to use LaTeX and prepare their submissions 
according to the instructions and styling guides for OASIcs provided by 
Dagstuhl.

Instructions for authors:

https://submission.dagstuhl.de/documentation/authors#oasics

At least one author of an accepted paper is expected to present the 
paper at the workshop as a registered participant.

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    PROCEEDINGS

All submissions will be peer-reviewed by at least three members of the 
program committee for quality and relevance.
Accepted regular papers (full, short, and tool papers) will be included 
in the workshop proceeding, which will be published as a volume of the
OpenAccess Series in Informatics (OASIcs) by Dagstuhl.

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    PROGRAM COMMITTEE

PC CO-CHAIRS

  * Diego Marmsoler (University of Exeter, UK) (D.Marmsoler at exeter.ac.uk)
  * Meng Xu (University of Waterloo, Canada) (meng.xu.cs at uwaterloo.ca)

PC MEMBERS

  * Massimo Bartoletti (University of Cagliari)
  * Bernhard Beckert (Karlsruhe Institute of Technology)
  * Franck Cassez (Movement Labs)
  * Denisa Diaconescu (University of Bucharest)
  * Maurice Herlihy (Brown University)
  * Sebastian Holler (Max Planck Institute for Security and Privacy)
  * Enrico Lipparini (University of Genoa)
  * Fan Long (University of Toronto)
  * Orestis Melkonian (Input Output (IOG))
  * Baoluo Meng (GE Aerospace Research)
  * Burcu Kulahcioglu Ozkan (Delft University of Technology)
  * Gordon Pace (University of Malta)
  * Vincent Rahli (University of Birmingham)
  * Sophie Rain (TU Wien)
  * Augusto Sampaio (Federal university of Pernambuco)
  * Derek Sorensen (Certora)
  * Bas Spitters (Aarhus University)
  * Meng Sun (Peking University)
  * Mark Utting (The University of Queensland)
  * Adele Veschetti (TU Darmstadt)
  * Christoph Weidenbach (Max Planck Institute for Informatics)
  * Teng Zhang (Aptos Labs)

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