Second International Conference on Internet Science in Brussels
27 May - Open day: Intended for all persons interested in Internet Science, this eventful day will allow participants to discover and interact with the EINS project experts that will introduce them to new social, political and economic issues involving the Internet. The morning will be devoted to conferences followed by an afternoon of exchanges in round tables ending with a cocktail.
28-29 May - Scientific conference: This year, the conference will involve an open and productive dialogue among scholars and practitioners about three main multidisciplinary topics: Internet and society (Internet and political participation, Internet of things and society, Virtual communities and behavioural patterns…), Internet and governance (Internet governance and evolution, Internet solutions for Sustainability, Social sciences and ethics for Internet use…), Internet and innovation (Collective intelligence for innovative solutions, New collaborative markets analytics, Intellectual property and the commons…).
Ms. Marietje Schaake, member of the European Parliament in Netherlands, will be among the keynote speakers along with more to discover on the event website: internetscienceconference.eu
CALL FOR PAPERS
Researchers from various disciplines will be able to submit papers on the conference three main topics: 'Internet and society', 'Internet and governance' and 'Internet and innovation'. The call for papers closes 20 February, 2015. Authors whose papers have been accepted will present their work during the conference. Accepted papers will also be published by Springer in the Lecture Notes in Computer Science (LNCS) series.
Through their work together, the EINS partners aim at strengthening scientific and technological excellence by developing an integrated and interdisciplinary scientific understanding of Internet networks and their co-evolution with society. The network brings together over thirty research institutions across Europe that are focusing on network engineering, computation, complexity, networking, security, mathematics, physics, sociology, game theory, economics, political sciences, humanities, and law, as well as other relevant social and life sciences.
The objective of EINS and this conference is to foster studies and experiments between all disciplines studying Internet systems from any technological or humanistic perspective, and which in turn are being transformed by continuous advances in Internet functionality.