IoTWeek2012Programme 10 06 SEL-copy · IoT-Week 2012 18-22 June 2012 Venice The Scuola Grande San...

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IoT-Week 2012 18-22 June 2012 Venice The Scuola Grande San Giovanni IoT- Week Partners Supported by

Transcript of IoTWeek2012Programme 10 06 SEL-copy · IoT-Week 2012 18-22 June 2012 Venice The Scuola Grande San...

IoT-Week 2012

18-22 June 2012Venice

The Scuola Grande San Giovanni

IoT- Week Partners

Supported by

Cover Programm IoT-Week 2012.indd 1 07.06.12 13:27

Monday 18.6.2012 |1

IoT Week 2012 Programme

Monday 18.6.2012 09:00 -09:45 Salone San Giovanni

09:00 Welcome & Housekeeping Alessandro Bassi, Sebastian Lange

09:05 IoT European Research Cluster: From Vision to Implementation - The way ahead.

Dr. Ovidiu Vermesan, IERC Coordinator 09:25 Overview on Activity Chains in the IERC Selected AC leaders

09:45 - 10:00 Coffee Break 10:00 -12:00 Salone San Giovanni

Cognitive Technologies for IoT - IERC AC 14 The session will focus on IoT cognitive and autonomic technologies with the objective of drafting a plan for 2012-2013 activities and identifying key synergies amongst existing projects. 10:00 Welcome IERC AC14 welcome. Setting the scene, scope of the cluster, IERC AC14 coordinator 10:10 Cognitive/Self-IoT Opportunities, Challenges and Approaches in EU Projects

10:10 iCore Perspective, Roberto Minerva, Telecom Italia, Itlay

10:25 BUTLER Perspective, Levent Gurgen, CEA-LETI, France

10:40 ebbits Perspective, Claudio Pastrone, ISMB, Italy

10:55 IoT@Work Perspective, Amine Mohamed Houyou, Siemens, Germany

11:10 IoT.est Perspective, Klaus Moessner, UNIS, UK

11:25 OUTSMART Perspective, Levent Gurgen, CEA-LETI, France

11:40 Open Discussion for 2012 Action Plan and Recommendation

10:00-12:00 Oratorio della Croce

CASAGRASII - Around the World The CASAGRAS2 Co-ordination Action project concludes in June and this session will present key findings and conclusions of a project which has been one of the key conduits for taking EU aspira-tions to next steps in international collaboration. 10:00 Welcome and introduction,

Monday 18.6.2012 |2

Ian Smith, SMART Identification, CASAGRAS2 Coordinator 10:10 CASAGRAS – the inclusive model and the importance of Governance,

Prof. Anthony Furness, Technical Co-ordinator, CASAGRAS2

10:25 The impact of CASAGRAS and future prospects for IoT developments in: Brazil, Prof Jose Amazonas, University of Sao Paulo Russia, Georgij Serebryakov, Sitronics Laboratories, Moscow India, Rajeev Prasad, GISFI, India Malaysia, Amir J Sidek, Custommedia, Kuala Lumpur

11:25 A general International overview – where we have been and what we learned,

Ian Smith, Co-ordinator, CASAGRAS2

11:40 A summary of key findings and conclusions of the CASAGRAS 2 project, Ian Smith and Anthony Furness

11.50 Questions 12:00-12:30 Salone San Giovanni

EC and IoT “Sailing towards the future”, Bernard Barani, Peter Friess, European Commission

12:30-13:30 Lunch 13:30-16:15 Salone San Giovanni

IoT Architecture - The IoT-A Architecture Reference Model (ARM) Developing and agreeing on joint architecture approaches for the IoT Part 1: IoT-A ARM

13:30 IoT-A Introduction, Alessandro Bassi, IoT-A Technical Coordinator 13:45 Reference Model, Alexandru Serbanati, CATTID 14:00 Reference Architecture, Carsten Magerkurth, SAP 14:25 Best practices, Joachim Walewski, Siemens 14:35 How IoT-A WPs contribute to the Reference Mode and the Reference Architecture? 15:05 Q/A

Part 2: Architectural issues in EU research

iCore, R .Giaffreda Probe-IT, Philippe Cousin IOT.est, Payam Barnaghi Butler, Frank Le Gall (tbc) IoT6, Sébastien Ziegler (tbc)

 Part 3: panel Discussion

Open session with Q&A and comments from the public 13:30 - 16:15 Oratorio della Croce

IoT for Energy Efficient Buildings

Monday 18.6.2012 |3

13.30 Future Internet Technologies in Green, Smart Buildings, Sotiris Nikoletseas (University of

Patras and CTI, Greece - HOBNET project) 13.50 IoT6 and Smart IPv6 building perspective, Sebastien Ziegler (Mandat International, Swit-

zerland - IoT6 project) 14.10 Interoperability in building environment, Dominique Genoud (University for Applied Scienc-

es, Switzerland - IoT6 project) 14.30 Federation of HOBNET and SmartSantander frameworks: challenges and potential way

forward, Srdjan Krco (Ericsson, Serbia - SmartSantander project) 14.50 The GreenerBuildings Project, Alexander Lazovik (University of Groningen, the Nether-

lands GreenerBuildings project) 15.10 ICT solutions supporting energy management for efficient energy consumption, production

and exchange, Christian Mastrodonato (D'Appolonia S.p.A. - EnergyWarden project) 15.30 Open discussion (potential cooperation, exploitation perspectives, standardization activi-

ties, joint dissemination actions etc)

16:15-16:30 Coffee Break 16:30-19:00 Salone San Giovanni

IoT Exploitation IERC - AC 11, IoT@Work This workshop session aims at fostering discussion on how the Internet of Things paradigm is go-ing to be realized in everyday-life, permeating the whole economy and society. During the workshops, major IERC projects will present their vision of IoT and its impact in different application fields, also highlighting current limitations and constraints to the adoption of IoT tech-nologies. First, an overview on the adoption of IoT for business purposes will be provided, with a major focus on industrial environment. Second, application scenarios related to smart life concept as well emergency and crisis management will be analyzed. The view on the application domains enabled by IoT will be completed by presenting initiatives promoting a common vision of IoT and supporting its exploitation, from both technical and non-technical perspectives. 16:30 Welcome remarks, Amine Mohamed Houyou, (Siemens AG – IoT@Work) 16:45 IoT application domains, Moderator: Maurizio Spirito (ISMB – ebbits)

IoT for business purposes ebbits: towards the integration of IoT into mainstream enterprise systems (focus on trace-ability and car manufacturing), Peter Rosengren (CNet – ebbits) Supporting Agile and Smart Manufacturing: an IoT-Centric Approach IoT@Work: vision and focus on industrial and automation environments., Amine Mohamed Houyou (Siemens AG – IoT@Work) IoT for a Smart Life BUTLER: IoT as an enabler for smart life application scenarios., Bruno Cendón (inno, BUTLER)

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An IoT-based solution for large-scale emergency management BRIDGE: adoption of IoT technologies to support crisis and emergency management Andreas Zimmermann (Fraunhofer FIT, BRIDGE)

17:45 Coffee break 18:00 Towards a common vision and a wider acceptance of IoT

Moderator: Amine Mohamed Houyou, (Siemens AG – IoT@Work)

IoT-i: analysis of IoT impact on European economy and society. Steps towards the defini-tion of a common vision. (Srdjan Krco, Ericsson, IoT-i) A unified IoT architectural reference model IoT-A: creation of an architectural reference model and key building blocks fostering the fu-ture IoT Martin Fiedler (Fraunhofer IML, IoT-A) Supporting IoT exploitation PROBE-IT: benchmarking of IoT deployments and analysis of less technical aspects in-cluding user acceptance, market and policies., Sophia Vallet-Chevillard (inno TSD, PROBE-IT)

18:45 Closing remarks Maurizio Spirito (ISMB – ebbits) and Amine Mohamed Houyou (Siemens

AG – IoT@Work)

16:30 – 19:00 Oratorio della Croce

Open session on Ethics / Privacy Organized by Rob Kranenburg and the IoT-I project, this interactive workshop looks at ethics as a real building block and potential 'usp' that will make actual everyday practices, services and im-plementation also really better. 16:30 Ângela Guimarães Pereira & Paula Curvelo, JRC - IPSC

In this section we would like to raise awareness about the ethics of IoT. We will do that by first investigating what imaginaries of IoT are, followed by a collaborative exercise where we will tap into the justifications we use to embrace and appropriate IoT technologies. Keynote: Do we really want to be smart?

Alice Benessia – IRIS, Università degli Studi di Torino, IT

Abstract: Emergent information technologies (IT), such as the so-called Internet of Things (IoT), constantly redefine the texture of our culture, society and lifestyle, raising a number of fundamental epistemic, normative and ethical issues, in a constant co-evolution. These technologies are con-structed, named, offered, and ultimately regulated, according and through specific techno-scientific imaginaries, here defined as collections of visual and verbal metaphors that are created and com-municated both in the specialized literature and in the mass media for the public at large. These imaginaries are embedded in an overarching narrative of techno-scientific innovation and they are functional to secure and sustain its corollaries, namely competitiveness and growth. The institutional ethical discourse about the IoT essentially identifies the issues of digital identity, privacy and security as the critical implications of IT innovation that need to be publicly addressed. While acknowledging the relevance of these concerns, we would like to focus on the consequenc-

Monday 18.6.2012 |5

es of the proposed positive sides of the envisioned IoT revolution, reflecting on some of their in-herent contradictions. Tapping into the mundane. A collaborative exercise. This is a creative workshop where the audience shall perform on relationships with mundane ob-jects. Participants will be asked to describe an object that organizers will provide, describing the thoughts and emotions it provokes, including individual stories or events that relate the participate to the object. The description should raise awareness of the object’s place in the quotidian, hence telling about the mundane of the object, including the dependencies and symbolic meanings it car-ries. The aims of the section are to explore paradoxical elements present in subject-objects and nature-culture relationships. In addition, we would like to question human autonomy in the context of greater (mundane) technology dependency. Lastly we will explore the controversial idea that “things” can have agency, as well as the notion that humans are a network of technological in-duced habits. 17:30 Rolf Weber: Corporate Social Responsibility and and ethical assessment of business

impacts on society

According to a modern understanding of corporate social responsibility (CSR) entreprises should implement a process to integrate social, environmental. ethical, human rights and consumer concerns into their business operations, particularly by identifying, preventing and mitigating possible adverse impacts. The EU Commission has submitted a renewed CSR strategy 2011-2014 in late 2011in order to promote a social dialogue.

The proposed Agenda for Action encompasses the following issues: (i) Enhancing the visi-bility of CSR and disseminating good practices, (ii) improving and tracking levels of trust in business, (iii) improving self- and co-regulation processes, (iv) enhancing market reward for CSR, etc. Part of the Agenda are resource efficiency, life-cycle assessment, pollution prevention, consumer interests and privacy, being topics which have a dirrect influence on IoT operations.

17:45 Franck Le Gall and Katharina Liebrand (Project Butler)

17:45 Introduction by Prof Jeroen van den Hoven with findings from the ETICA project

18:05 Interactive session based on the BUTLER horizontal story line: bottom-up extraction of ethical issues

18:25 Panel session. Chair Franck Le Gall, participants: Katharina Liebrand, Jeroen van den Hoven, Gabriela Bodea.

Question to be debated will be: How is the impact on business modeling (constraints / opportunities) in the future? Speaking of globalisation of markets what mentionable differences do we see internation-ally? How does it affect the implementation and exploitation of technologies in the future?

18:45 Gérald Santucci will close with a recap, main results and most important points for further

research. 16:30 – 19:00 Sala de l’albergo

EioT-A Meeting (restricted)

Tuesday 19.6.2012 |6

Tuesday 19.6.2012 09:00 -12:00 Salone San Giovanni Joint Opening Session - IoT Week and IoT Forum

High-level speakers jointly opening of the IoT week and the IoT International Forum 09:00 Welcome Address

Prof. Carlo Maria Medaglia, CATTID, Representative of the Italian Ministry of Research (MIUR - Ministry of Information, University and Research)

09:15 "IoT, what's in a name?" Constantijn van Oranje-Nassau, Member of the Cabinet of Vice-President Neelie Kroes, Commissioner for Digital Agenda, European Commission

09:30 "Things, Not Objects, Or: Meaningful Connections" Adam Greenfield, Founder and managing Director of Urbanscale

09:50 "Open Data and the Internet of Things" Usman Haque, Director Haque Design + Research Ltd, founder of Pachube

10:10 "EU-Japan Collaboration Opportunities" Ken Sakamura, Professor UNL, Japan

10:30 – 10:45 Coffee Break 10:50 "IoT Governance in the Broader Context of the EU Digital Agenda Strategy"

Gérald Santucci, European Commission

11:10 Introduction and opening of the IoT Forum Rahim Tafazolli, Director, CCSR, University of Surrey,

12:00-13:00 Lunch 13:00-14:00 Sala Verde IoT Week Press Conference

Press conference with representatives from EC, IERC and most relevant IoT projects Speakers will be available for interviews. Open to all press representatives

13:00-16:00 Salone San Giovanni

The Internet of Things – Where is it going? A global overview This session focuses on brief reports from around the world. Speakers will present different chal-lenges. Different interpretations and these views confirm the decision of the Commission to take a lead role in supporting and developing a significant global harmonization programme. Co-Chairs: Ian Smith ( Co-ordinator CASAGRAS2) . Philippe Cousin (Co-ordinator PROBE-It) 13.00 A Global Overview, Ian Smith

Tuesday 19.6.2012 |7

13.10 Global IoT Interoperability, Philippe Cousin 13.20 From Japan, Ryo Imura, Vice-President and Executive Vice President,, Hitachi Systems 13.35 From USA, Daniel W. Caprio, Jr. | Senior Strategic Advisor McKenna Long & Aldridge LLP 13.50 From USA, Stephen Halliday, President, High Tech Aid 14.05 From Korea, Yong-Woon Kim, ETRI, Korea 14.20 From Brazil, Jose Roberto Amazonas, University of Sao Paulo 14.35 From India, Rajeev Prasad, Global ICT Standardisation Forum for India 14.50 From China, Mrs Zhang Xueli, CATR (China Academy Telecom &Research) 15.05 From Taiwan, Grace Lin , Shou-Yan –Chou, III (Institute Information Industry) 15.20 From Africa (as a whole), Louis Coetze, CSIR South Africa 15.35 From Australia, Marimuthu Palaniswami, University of Melbourne

13:00 – 19:00 Oratorio della Croce

EC internal meeting (restricted)

13:00 – 16:00 Sala de l’albergo

BUTLER EMG Meeting (restricted) 13:00 – 16:00 Saletta Stucchi IoT-A WP2 internal meeting (restricted) 13:00 – 19:00 Sala Azzura IERC AC4 semantic interoperability,

13:00 Introduction to IERC AC4 (Scope, Objectives, Reports, Deliverables) Speaker: Martin Serrano / Philippe Cousin

Task objectives Contributions Received for 2012 IERC AC4 Manifesto / White Paper IoT Best practices for Semantic interoperability (IERC AC4 Manifesto, White Paper, Book, Recommendations, Standards)

13:30 Plenary Talk 1 - ETSI M2M and the needs for Semantics

Speaker: Joerg Swetina, NEC Laboratories Europe, Heidelberg, Germany

14:00 Plenary Talk 2 -- W3C Semantic Sensor Networks: Ontologies, Applications, and fu-ture Directions” Speaker: Cory A. Henson, Wright State University, Ohio State U.S.A.

14:30 SEMANTIC INTEROPERABILITY I

Activities from the flag EU IoT projects – Part 1 Speaker: Martin Serrano + All participants (10’ per contributor project) 10 minutes presentation (summary) + 5 Minutes Q&A

iCORE, Internet Connected Objects for the Reconfigurable Ecosystems, Abdur Rahim IoT@Work, Internet of Things at Work, Domenico Rotondi IoT.est, Internet of Things Environment for Service Creation and Testing, Payam Bar-

naghi GAMBAS, Generic Adaptive Middleware for Behavior-driven Autonomous Services,

Josiane Parreira.

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15:30 Coffee Break and Networking 16:00 SEMANTIC INTEROPERABILITY II, Activities from the flag EU IoT projects – Part 2

Speaker: Martin Serrano + All participants (10’ per contributor project) 10 minutes presentation (summary) + 5 Minutes Q&A

COIN, Enterprise Collaboration and Interoperability, Sergio Gusmeroli OpenIoT, Open source blueprint for large-scale self-organizing cloud environments for

IoT applications, Martin Serrano IoT6, Universal Integration of the Internet of Things through an IPv6-based Service

Oriented Architecture enabling heterogeneous components interoperability, Antonio Skarmeta

ISN, Interoperable Sensor Networks, Walter Colitti Smart Agrifood, Smart Food and Agribusiness, Christopher Brewster

17:00 Towards define best practices for semantic interoperability > Standardizations Dis-

cussion on Specific Common Research Topics Speaker: Martin Serrano + All participants Rapporteur / Moderator: Sergio Gusmeroli

Analysis about project common topics, e.g. ontology development methods, tools, lan-guages; interoperability semantic information as linked open data; real time vs. business documents interoperability.

18:00 Reports Summary: Initial inputs for the IERC AC4 Manifesto / white paper Wrap--‐Up Day Activities

16:00-16:30 Coffee break 16:30-19:00 Salone San Giovanni

Implementing the Internet of Things This workshop session introduces the demonstrators and pilots from project members of the IERC. In addition, external IoT projects are invited to share their experience with implementing real-life IoT systems for experimental or even commercial deployment of both IoT applications and plat-forms. This session is coordinated by the Activity Chain “Application Scenarios and Exploitation”, which organizes the “IoT Exploitation” session as well. The participants to this session get a chance to learn about the background of the project pilots, and are welcome to roam through the exhibition hall where the physical pilots are displayed. 16:30 Welcome remarks, Amine M. Houyou (Siemens AG – IoT@Work) 16:35 IoT Pilots & Invited Talks

Supporting Agile and Smart Manufacturing IoT@Work: Enabling IoT applications in automation environments Amine M. Houyou (Siemens AG – IoT@Work)

IOT–A: using the reference architecture for fusing IoT technologies and solutions. The demonstrated use cases are concentrated in the areas of health care and retail. Martin Fiedler (Fraunhofer IML – IOT-A) IOT-A: IBM Mote Runner Development and Run-Time Platform for Wireless Sensor Networks

Tuesday 19.6.2012 |9

Demonstrating the development process of WSNs applications based on the Mote Runner platform. Marcus B Oestreicher (IBM – IOT-A) ELLIOT: San Raffaele Hospital Living Lab Use-Case. The healthy interactive vending machine. Gabriella Monteleone (kit-digital – ELLIOT) SmartSantander: Experimenting IoT at a city scale. Reporting on IoT use-cases in the cities of Santander, Belgrade, Guildford, and Lübeck, Jose Manuel Hernandez Muñoz (Telefonica I+D, SmartSantander) IoT6: Demonstrating the role of IPv6 in IoT deployment. This first demonstration will present several uses cases of possible IoT interactions based on IPv6, Sébastien Ziegler (Mandat International, IoT6) PROBE-IT: Validating IoT using an Open & Standardised Testing Methodology: the 6LoWPAN case. The demonstration shows how to use an open & standardised methodology for a range of tests on IoT building blocks.Pedro Maló (UNINOVA, PROBE-IT) "From DACAR to MUNICH. IoT in healthcare, wellness and ambient assisted living. Prof. Christoph Thuemmler, Edinburgh Napier University Inteligoo: Catch the drops, make an ocean. Invited talk for Smart City use cases, Dr. Morja Volk (University of Ljubjana)

17:55 Closing remarks going through the exhibition hall to view the live demonstrators

16:30 – 19:00 Sala dell’albergo

Privacy & Security Workshop “Which Way the Right Way for IoT?” A Workshop to promote International dissemination and dialogue related to Trust and Confidence in IoT through Security and Privacy. 16:30 Workshop Welcome – Trevor Peirce, IERC - AC 05 Leader/CASAGRAS2 16:35 The European Policy Environment

Ethical Dimension and EC Call Opportunities, Peter Friess, EC

Internet of Things and Privacy by Design toward a standardisation process, Nicola Fabi-ano, Lawyer Studio Legale Fabiano

From privacy to privacies, from security to securities, rethinking the nature of assets, threats, risks and value in Internet of Things, Rob van Kranenburg, Chair of the Working Group Society of the IOT Forum

The Internet of Things for People, Pete Eisenegger, ANEC

17:05 PANEL 1: Supporting European Public Policies:

European Data Protection & ePrivacy – What anticipated influence on IoT?

IoT Governance, Privacy Impact Assessment, public notification, “Silence of the chips” and other aspects. What do they mean for IoT? What influences upon Trust and Confidence?

Tuesday 19.6.2012 |10

What is the best Policy approach? What should be provisioned or allowed for?

17:25 IoT Research – towards a Cluster solution to IoT Security and Privacy and, the role

of Standardization

Architectural foundations of security in IoT, presenting the progress beyond SOTA in IoT-A, Alessandro Serbanati, IoT-A

Capability Based Approaches to Authentication and Authorization, Domenico Rotondi, IoT@Work

Developing pervasive security for the IoT, Fabien Castanier, BUTLER

User-side Utility-Driven Privacy Management in IoT, Thanasis Papaioannou, EPFL

Potential innovations and challenges in the Trust and Security Research Domain, Paul Malone, Head of Security at TSSG, EFFECTSPLUS

IoT Security & “privacy” – Standardization activities and results in ITU-T, Martin Euchner, ITU-T

18:30 PANEL 2: Cooperation building success:

IoT European Research Cluster – Project contributions to IoT security and privacy

The “I” in IoT – The role of the Internet

The Role of Standards Organizations in building trust and confidence in IoT

Panel Discussion – How far can we rely upon the outcomes from Research and Stand-ards? What are their limits? How to achieve a coordinated/unified stakeholder supported approach?

18:45 IoT Technologies and Applications

Designing systems for security not just nodes, Ian Drew, Executive VP Strategy, ARM

Leveraging IOT security and privacy with Secure Identities and work in IETF and IEEE 802, Robert Moskowitz, Verizon

19:00 PANEL 3: The way forward:

Security approaches to embedded IoT and their impacts upon privacy

IoT Applications “privacy & security by design” – Industry Insight

Approaches to the accommodating legacy IoT in maintaining trust

Panel Discussion – What role have technology providers vs. operators? What are the next step in research and innovation? How industry views the contribution of standardisation to IoT Privacy and Security? Communication and relevant interfaces – what expectation from industry?

19:10 – 19:15 Closing Summary and what to expect next?

16:30 – 19:00 Sala Verde

IoT-A Cross-WP4/WP7 Meeting (restricted)

19:00-23:00 IoT Week Evening Event (see detailed description p. 28)

Wednesday 20.6.2012 |11

Wednesday 20.6.2012 Saletta Stucci 08:00 - 09:00 IoT-A TSC Meeting (restricted) 09:00 -12:00 Salone San Giovanni

IoT Enabler The future internet of things will rely heavily on a set of enabling technologies, which already exist or have to be developed. The IERC activity chain on enabling technology (AC13) has the task of developing a roadmap of the required technologies to make IoT a reality. This session will give an initial overview over the intended topics and area of interest to be covered in the activity chain. It should not give a closed list of technologies and topics but rather initiate an open discussion towards the development of a roadmap. The workshop will be the kick-off event for the AC13 (Enabling Technology) activity chain in the IERC cluster.

9:00 IERC Cluster: General Roadmap Presentation, Ovidiu Vermesan, CASAGRAS2 9:25 Enabling Technologies in the BUTLER project, Prof. Giuseppe Abreu, BUTLER 9:50 IoT Adoption Opportunities - Privacy & Security, Trevor Peirce, CASAGRAS2 10:15 Interoperability in IoT, Philippe Cousin, Probe-IT 10:40 Cognitive techniques in IoT, Abdur Rahim, iCORE 11:05 Ethical Issues in the future Internet of things, Angela Pereira, JRC, Ispra Plenary round and discussion with all presenters in preparation of the IoT Enabler Roadmap.

09:00 – 16:00 Oratorio della Croce

EC internal meeting (restricted)

09:00-18:00 Sala dell’albergo

IoT A Stakeholder Workshop (restricted) 09:00-12:30 Sala Azzura IERC AC4 semantic interoperability

09:00 Hands--on Session Speaker: Martin Serrano + All participants (Round Table)

Review of Contributions Received for 2012 IERC AC4 Manifesto / White Paper Review of Content and ToC for contributions To define some methods, procedures and operational tools 8i.e. web repository, wiki page) to collect and put in common all the semantic interoperability information for the white pa-per / manifesto.

11:00 Discussion on Objectives, reports, Deliverables and Next Steps

Planning of Next Meetings 11:30 Wrap-Up Day Activities

Wednesday 20.6.2012 |12

10:00 – 10:30 Coffee break 10:30-12:30 Sala Verde Governance session for multi-national commercial organizations

What are the key IoT issues for the multi-national commercial community? This session provides an open forum for multi-nationals to express their concerns and their views. Invitations have been sent to a range of commercial companies to join this round table and express their attitude to IoT Governance, Privacy, Security issues – and anything they would care to raise. Governance has been a key topic for the CASAGRAS2 project and Prof Anthony Furness will out-line key concerns from his work package report that will certainly be influenced by the approach of the multi-national companies. Ian Smith, the CASAGRAS2 co-ordinator will chair the session which it is expected will include speakers from Robert Bosch GmbH, Oracle USA, Alcatel, Erics-son and others.

12:30-13:30 Lunch 13:30-16:00 Salone San Giovanni

IPv6 and IOT The potential interactions between IPv6 and the future IoT. IOT6 and 6DEPLOY-2 There have been a number of recent activities around the IPv6 protocol that impact Internet of Things. The IETF is developing new IPv6-based standards, the smart grid is considering IPv6 as a candidate for its global addressing scheme, the IPSO alliance is actively supporting IPv6 and CoAP, the ZigBee Alliance is developing profiles which are IPv6 compliant. Conversely, IPv6 and 6LoWPAN will be addressed by most of the IoT architecture projects. This session is organized in two main parts. It will start by presenting various perspectives on IPv6 for the Internet of Things. It will present some figures and innovative applications, as well as some industrial, academic and standardization developments with European and Asian perspectives. The second part of the session will explore potential synergies around IPv6 in the frame of the IERC. It will gather a panel made of various research projects and bodies to share their views and to discuss possible cooperations. The session is coorganized by IoT6 and 6Deploy-2. The IoT6 project is exploring the potential of IPv6 to develop a service oriented architecture for the future Internet of things, enabling cross-domain interactions, including with the cloud. 6DEPLOY-2 provides training and support activities to ease IPv6 deployment.

Introductory Keynote The Future of the Internet, Peter Kirstein (UCL)

IPv6 perspectives for the IoT IPv6 around the World, Latif Ladid (IPv6 Forum) IPv6 metrics, Franck Le Gall (INNO) IPv6 network perspective, Olivier Dupont (Cisco) IPv6 and M2M standardization, Patrick Guilllemin (ETSI) Governments Enabled with IPv6, Antonio Skarmetta (GEN6 ) IPv6 and Smart Things Information Service, Daeyoung Kim (KAIST)

Wednesday 20.6.2012 |13

IPv6 Chinese perspectives, Liu Dong (BII)

IERC panel on IPv6 IoT6, Sébastien Ziegler Hobnet, Sotiris Nikoletseas CALIPSO, Andrzej Duda Probe IT, Philippe Cousin IoT-I, Srdjan Krco IoT-A, Alessandro Bassi IERC, Ovidiu Vermesan 6Deploy-2, Martin Potts

13:30-19:00 Sala Azzura

iCore ESG + PMT meeting (restricted)

16:00 - 16:30 Coffee Break 16:30-18:30 Salone San Giovanni

IoT International Forum Working Group Technology (including Architecture) Introduction – Srdjan Krco, Ericsson; Richard Egan, Thales

ETSI M2M overview and implementation of the specs, Sebastian Wahle, Fraunhofer FOKUS

IPSO presentation, Jan Holler, Ericsson

Discussion on standardization: ETSI M2M, IPSO and IETF, how to coordinate and align?

IPv6 summary, Sebastian Ziegler, Mandate International

Semantics session summary, Martin Serrano, DERI, tbc

Discussion on organization of the next session event, charter etc.

Wrap-up

16:30- 19:00 Saletta Stucchi

IoT-A – internal meeting WP 5 + WP5/7 (restricted) 16:30-19:00 Oratorio della Croce

Benchmarking IoT deployments

Abstract The session aims at establishing the needs and goals for ioT deployment benchmarks. It will re-view the state of the art and needs for benchmarking of IoT deployments from different viewpoints, at global scale. The focus will be on highlighting the commonalities and gaps between the various stakeholders’s needs for benchmark.

Wednesday 20.6.2012 |14

A benchmarking model will be proposed and discussed with the participants. The foreseen output of the workshop is the identification of the next year roadmap for an IoT deployment benchmarking framework.

Session organisers The session is organized by the PROBE-IT FP7 project. PROBE-IT is a two years European project with international partners from China, Brazil and Africa that aims at supporting exploitation of European research advances in IoT deployments. It focuses on analyzing existing and ongoing worldwide deployments in different perspectives, including as-sessment of technical validation approaches and filling the needs of policy makers, deployments drivers, technology providers and users. For doing this, the project is addressing three different areas:

1. benchmarking of IoT deployments to provide stakeholders with decision tools aimed at identifying the best options when deploying or using IoT

2. developing guidelines for stakeholders to plan IoT roll-out;

3. testing roadmaps and solutions to provide stakeholders with elements to validate tech-nologies conformance and interoperability.

Target audience

All stakeholders that have an interest in benchmarking IoT deployments, including de-ployments providers and beneficiaries ;

European research and pilot projects in IoT.

Agenda 16:30 “Current situation and leads for IoT deployments benchmarking”

Sophie Vallet Chevillard, inno

17:00 “Policy makers expectations from IoT benchmarks” Oliver Rouxel, French General Directorate for Competitiveness, Industry and Services

17:20 “Smart-cities benchmarking in China” Xueli Zhang, China Academy of Telecommunication Research of MII

17:40 “Measuring users experience in the Internet of Things domain” Marc Pallot, Nottingham University Business School

18:15 “Options for technological benchmarks of IoT deployments” Alex Gluhak, University of Surrey

18:35 Panel “Toward a common vision of IoT deployment benchmarks” Moderator: Franck Le Gall, inno Participants: Sophie Vallet-Chevillard, Olivier Rouxel, Xueli Zhang, Marc Pallot and Alex Gluhak

18:55 Closing remarks, Franck Le Gall

Thursday 21.6.2012 |15

Thursday 21.6.2012 09:00-11:00 Salone San Giovanni

IoT International Forum Working Group Economics The Economics Workshop is part of the IoT International Forum. Its objective is to provide insight into how to run an IoT company by discussing business models, best practices and practical guide-lines with the participants. The following speakers will have dedicated talks:

Prof. Dr.-Ing. Wolfgang Maass, Chair in Business Administration esp. Information and Service Systems, Saarland University, Germany Dr. Stefan Ferber, Director Communities & Partner Networks, Bosch Software Innovations GmbH Rob van Kranenburg, Founder of Council, Chair of the Working Group Society of the IoT Forum & IoT Expert at EU commission Jürgen Hase, Vice President M2M Competence Center, Deutsche Telekom AG Alessandro Bassi, Alessandro Bassi Consulting, Acting (for Hitachi, Ltd) as Technical Coordinator for the “IoT-A” project

11:00 – 11:30 Coffee break 11:30-13:00 Salone San Giovanni

IoT International Forum Working Group Societal

The Internet of Things is a horizontal operation that will influence and change society like the book and the web has done. The difference is that this time many stakeholders are involved in shaping it: traditional policymakers and innovators, big industry and startup SME, philosophers and design-ers and an evergrowing group of individual actors with web and cheap hardware tools. Together we have to debate the most productive balance between top down and bottom up in issues such as privacy, security, energy and solidarity. 11:30 Introduction and presenting IoT Comic book Number 2, Mirko Presser (IoT-i)

11:35 Developments in IoT: The Big 4: EU, USA, China and the end user, Rob van Kranen-burg (Chair)

11:50 Design and Development: Cesar Garcia
 The DataCitizen Driven City project, and our current activities at Medialab-Prado to engage citizens into air quality sensing.

12:05 Energy: Paulo Barratini IOT should be in itself sustainable. It should be assessed with Life cycle analysis and envi-ronmental impact.

12:20 Energy: Irene López de Vallejo

Thursday 21.6.2012 |16

The social impact of IoT studied in the context of the FP7 EeB project TIBUCON: Self Powered Wireless Sensor Network for HVAC System Energy Improvement.

12:35 Innovation: Gerd Kortuem The "Sustainable Society Network's goal is to create a community of academics, corpora-tions and third sector/NGOs interested in the application of Digital Technologies in achiev-ing sustainability goals.

12:45 Smart Cities: Tomaz Vidonia How can we target the smaller cities in Europe and make smart city concepts for them? What is the status of IoT in Central Europe?

13:00-14:00 Lunch 14:00-15:00 Salone San Giovanni

IoT International Forum Working Group Societal 14:00 Education: Workshop in teams

Devising and designing a curriculum for education (5-18), with a focus on technical educa-tion, jobs and youth unemployment: media wisdom- sensor wisdom, how can we get pro-gramming and arduino-processing into primary education?

15:00-15:30 Coffee break 15:30-17:30 Salone San Giovanni IoT International Forum

Working Group Legislation & Governance EC Consultation on the ''governance'' of the ''Internet of Things'', Florent Frederix, European Commission Discussions and outcomes of the IoT Week session for multi-national companies on governance, Antony Furness, CASAGRAS2 CASAGRAS2 and IERC activity chain Work on IoT Governance, Antony Furness, CASAGRAS2 Discussion round conducted by Rolf Weber, Professor for International Business Law, University of Zurich

17:30-18:30 Salone San Giovanni

IoT International Forum Wrap-up & Sustainability of the forum

09:00-18:00 Sala Azzura CASAGRAS final partner meeting (restricted) 09:00-16:30 Oratorio della Croce

IoT Everything Linked: From the Sensors to the Cloud

Thursday 21.6.2012 |17

9:00 Workshop opening: Projects presentation – Dr. Pedro Marrón (University of Duisburg)

9:15 Session 1: IoT Architecture deployed at each project

Architecture for large scale environmental sensors. Dr. Pedro Marrón (University of Duisburg - Essen). PLANET Project

A framework for Smart cities mobility. Marcus Handte (University of Duisburg - Essen). GAMBAS Project

An Open approach to IoT architecture. Martín Serrano (DERI). OpenIoT Project

Large Scale sensor network in Smart City. Luis Sánchez (University of Cantabria). SmartSantander Project

11:00 Coffee break

11:30 Session 2: Use cases addressed and Pilot sites

Doñana Biological Reserve and UAV airfield. Antidio Viguria (FADACATEC). PLANET Project

Use cases for Madrid Public buses system. Manuel Serrano (ETRAI+D). GAMBAS Pro-ject

Pilot application in SmartSantander. Luis Sánchez (University of Cantabria). SmartSan-tander Project

13:00 Lunch break

14:00 Session 3: Technical and Scientific outcomes

Platform for the Deployment and Operation of Heterogeneous Networked Cooperat-ing Objects. Dr. Pedro Marrón (University of Duisburg - Essen). PLANET Project

Generic Adaptive Middleware for Behaviour-driven Autonomous Services Marcus Handte (University of Duisburg - Essen). GAMBAS Project

Open Source Solution for the Internet of Things into the Cloud. Martín Serrano (DERI). OpenIoT Project

Experimentation support over Internet of Things testbed. Luis Sánchez (University of Cantabria). SmartSantander Project

15:45 Session 4: Round table and conclusions

14:00-16:00 Sala dell’albergo

IoT/RFID and Waste Management, The BURBA Project

BURBA (Bottom up selection, collection and management of URBAn waste)

Abstract:

The aim of BURBA project is to develop an automatic system to be used for intelligent waste man-agement. The system consists of intelligent waste containers (IWAC) and IT tool for waste collec-tion and transport management. It will include both RFID’s (Radio Frequency Identification) and cell-based-phone LBS’ (Local-Based service) abilities. RFID will allow to reliably identifying individ-

Thursday 21.6.2012 |18

ual receptacles, users, single marked items or waste categories, while LBS will allow an easy iden-tification of the location of the most suitable waste container and an improvement of its utilization by the citizen (it permits to choose the closest one to user actual position, not full, for that waste category, etc).

BURBA rugged system will be integrated into “intelligent waste containers” with capacities of 600 li-tres and over, for urban and industrial waste collection. The foreseen IT tool will manage appropri-ately position and time of collection and optimize truck fleet path and queuing to waste disposal plants (for example incinerators that need continuous adequate feeding in quantity and quality); as well as the differential waste disposal to feed recycling facilities. It will so far contribute to improve the management of the waste transport vehicle fleet, to minimise transportation path and diminish fuel expenditures as well as optimise gain of disposal plants and service to citizens and industrial companies avoiding overfilled containers. Additional features of the platform are the support to rap-id deployment of the containers on demand having the possibility to track their position and to redi-rect and reschedule the waste collection activities.

Agenda:

14:00 Welcome 14:10 BURBA Project Presentation, Ing. Carolina Launo, D’Appolonia 14:50 Life Cycle Analysis and environmental impacts, Dr. Paolo Barattini, Ridgeback 15:10 Privacy and Legal Issues, Dr. Barattini and Ing. Carolina Launo 15:30 Coffee break 15:45 Feedbacks, comments (All) 16:00 Closure of the session

14:00-18:00 Sala Verde

EU-Taiwan Meeting (restricted) 16:00-18:00 Sala dell’albergo

iCORE / China Meeting (restricted) 09:00-18:00 Saletta Stucchi

IoT6 Internal Meeting (restricted)

Friday 22.6.2012 |19

Friday 22.6.2012 09:00 -18:00 Sala Azzura

IoT-A WP1 internal meeting (restricted) 09:00-12:00 Sala Verde

CASAGRAS Review Meeting (restricted) 09:00 -18:00 Saletta Stucchi

HOBNET Review Meeting (restricted)

IoT International Forum, Event #2 |20

IoT International Forum, Event #2 Wednesday, 20th June Thursday, 21st June Programme Wednesday, 20th June 16:30-18:30 Salone San Giovanni

IoT International Forum Working Group Technology (including Architecture) Introduction – Srdjan Krco, Ericsson; Richard Egan, Thales

ETSI M2M overview and implementation of the specs, Sebastian Wahle, Fraunhofer FOKUS

IPSO presentation, Jan Holler, Ericsson

Discussion on standardization: ETSI M2M, IPSO and IETF, how to coordinate and align?

IPv6 summary, Sebastian Ziegler, Mandate International

Semantics session summary, Martin Serrano, DERI, tbc

Discussion on organization of the next session event, charter etc.

Wrap-up

Thursday, 21st June

09:00-11:00 Salone San Giovanni

IoT International Forum Working Group Economics The Economics Workshop is part of the IoT International Forum. Its objective is to provide insight into how to run an IoT company by discussing business models, best practices and practical guide-lines with the participants. The following speakers will have dedicated talks:

Prof. Dr.-Ing. Wolfgang Maass, Chair in Business Administration esp. Information and Service Systems, Saarland University, Germany Dr. Stefan Ferber, Director Communities & Partner Networks, Bosch Software Innovations GmbH

IoT International Forum, Event #2 |21

Rob van Kranenburg, Founder of Council, Chair of the Working Group Society of the IoT Forum & IoT Expert at EU commission Jürgen Hase, Vice President M2M Competence Center, Deutsche Telekom AG Alessandro Bassi, Alessandro Bassi Consulting, Acting (for Hitachi, Ltd) as Technical Coordinator for the “IoT-A” project

11:30-13:00 Salone San Giovanni

IoT International Forum Working Group Societal

The Internet of Things is a horizontal operation that will influence and change society like the book and the web has done. The difference is that this time many stakeholders are involved in shaping it: traditional policymakers and innovators, big industry and startup SME, philosophers and design-ers and an evergrowing group of individual actors with web and cheap hardware tools. Together we have to debate the most productive balance between top down and bottom up in issues such as privacy, security, energy and solidarity. 11:30 Introduction and presenting IoT Comic book Number 2, Mirko Presser (IoT-i)

11:35 Developments in IoT: The Big 4: EU, USA, China and the end user, Rob van Kranen-burg (Chair)

11:50 Design and Development: Cesar Garcia
 The DataCitizen Driven City project, and our current activities at Medialab-Prado to engage citizens into air quality sensing.

12:05 Energy: Paulo Barratini IOT should be in itself sustainable. It should be assessed with Life cycle analysis and envi-ronmental impact.

12:20 Energy: Irene López de Vallejo The social impact of IoT studied in the context of the FP7 EeB project TIBUCON: Self Powered Wireless Sensor Network for HVAC System Energy Improvement.

12:35 Innovation: Gerd Kortuem The "Sustainable Society Network's goal is to create a community of academics, corpora-tions and third sector/NGOs interested in the application of Digital Technologies in achiev-ing sustainability goals.

12:45 Smart Cities: Tomaz Vidonia How can we target the smaller cities in Europe and make smart city concepts for them? What is the status of IoT in Central Europe?

14:00-15:00 Salone San Giovanni

IoT International Forum Working Group Societal 14:00 Education: Workshop in teams

IoT International Forum, Event #2 |22

Devising and designing a curriculum for education (5-18), with a focus on technical educa-tion, jobs and youth unemployment: media wisdom- sensor wisdom, how can we get pro-gramming and arduino-processing into primary education?

15:30-17:30 Salone San Giovanni IoT International Forum

Working Group Legislation & Governance EC Consultation on the ''governance'' of the ''Internet of Things'', Florent Frederix, European Commission Discussions and outcomes of the IoT Week session for multi-national companies on governance, Antony Furness, CASAGRAS2 CASAGRAS2 and IERC activity chain Work on IoT Governance, Antony Furness, CASAGRAS2 Discussion round conducted by Rolf Weber, Professor for International Business Law, University of Zurich

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Keynote speakers Constantijn van Oranje-Nassau, European Commission, Member of the Cabinet of Vice-President Neelie Kroes, Commissioner for Digital Agenda. Constantijn van Oranje has master degrees in Law from Leiden University (1995) and in Busi-ness Administration from INSEAD at Fontainebleau (2000). He is Senior Advisor in the Cabi-net of European Commission Vice-President Neelie Kroes, responsible for the European Digi-tal Agenda. Until recently Constantijn was Head of the Information Policy and Economics team at RAND Europe, and Head of Brussels office of the RAND Corporation. Before joining RAND Europe, Mr. Van Oranje worked as an associate analyst for Booz Allen & Hamilton in London (2001-2003), where he worked on a variety of projects in ICT, print media and fast

moving consumer goods. This was preceded by a traineeship at the International Finance Corporation in ICT in-vestment portfolio management. Constantijn started his professional career at the European Commission, working 5 years in the Cabinet of Commissioner Van de Broek (1995-1999). Mr. Van Oranje also advised the Dutch Foreign Ministry on European communication strategy (2003-2010), and holds a number of Board positions in charitable foundations in The Netherlands.

Adam Greenfield, Founder and managing director Adam Greenfield, founder and managing director of Urbanscale, is a passionate advo-cate for the human-centered design of technological systems. Between 2008 and 2010, he was Nokia’s head of design direction for service and user interface design; earlier in the decade, he had worked as lead information architect for

the Tokyo office of Internet consultancy Razorfish. He is the author of Everyware: The dawning age of ubiquitous computing (2006), Urban computing and its discon-tents (2007, with Mark Shepard) and the forthcoming The city is here for you to use. He teaches at New York University’s Interactive Telecommunications Program — during the 2007-2009 academic years, with Kevin Slavin, the pioneering Urban Computing course, and currently a course entitled Urban Experi-ence in the Network Age. With his wife, artist Nurri Kim, Adam is also co-founder of Do projects, a platform for collaborative making. Since 2010, Do projects has conducted the innovative Systems/Layers “walkshops” in cities around the world, a series of walking tours dedicated to investigating the ways in which digital networks gather information from and return in-formation to the street. After graduating from New York University with an honors degree in Cultural Studies in 1989, Adam has been a rock critic for SPIN Magazine, a San Francisco bike messenger, a medic at the Berkeley Free Clinic and, between 1995 and 2000, psychological operations specialist (later sergeant) in the 7 PSYOP Gp of the United States Army’s Special Operations Command. Adam has spoken before South by Southwest Interactive, LIFT (and LIFT Asia), PICNIC, Harvard University’s Graduate School of Design and Berkman Center for Internet & Society, Columbia’s Graduate School of Architec-ture, Planning and Preservation, the Office of the Privacy Commissioner of Canada, Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology, the École Nationale Supérieure d’Arts et Métiers, the MIT Media Lab, the Royal Society of London, and a very wide variety of other citizen, professional, corporate, academic and governmental audiences worldwide. He has lived and worked in the United States, the United Kingdom, France, Finland, Korea and Japan.

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Usman Haque Usman Haque is the founder of Pachube (now known as Cosm.com), a real-time data infra-structure for the Internet of Things used by thousands of people and companies around the world (acquired by LogMeIn Inc in 2011, where he currently leads the Urban Productions Unit). Trained as an architect, he has created responsive environments, interactive installations, digi-tal interface devices and dozens of mass-participation initiatives. His skills include the design and engineering of both physical spaces and the software and systems that bring them to life.

He received the 2008 Design of the Year Award (interactive) from the Design Museum, UK, a 2009 World Technol-ogy Award (art), a Wellcome Trust Sciart Award, a grant from the Daniel Langlois Foundation for Art, Science and Technology, the Swiss Creation Prize, Belluard Bollwerk International, the Japan Media Arts Festival Excellence prize and the Asia Digital Art Award Grand Prize.

Prof. Ken Sakamura, Ph.D. Born in Tokyo in 1951, he is currently a professor of the Interfaculty Initiative in Information Stud-ies at the Graduate School of the University of Tokyo, and the director of Institute of Infrastructure Application of Ubiquitous Computing there. He has been the leader of the TRON project since 1984. In this capacity, he has designed the TRON open computer system architecture, which has been used in many consumer electronics appliances including mobile phones (esp. its radio control), digital cameras, FAX machines, en-

gine control of automobiles, etc. The latest TRON specification OS is called T-Kernel. Today, the IoT (Internet of Things) or Ubiquitous Computing is a major research and development target, and basic research and application developments and leading-edge prototype systems are being built (http://www.t-engine.org). He has held the posi-tion of the director/CEO of YRP Ubiquitous Networking Laboratory since January 2002. He has been elected as fellow and golden core member of the IEEE Computer Society. He was awarded Takeda Award in 2001, Ichimura Academic Award from the new technology development foundation in 2001, the Medal with Purple Ribbon from Japanese government in 2003, and Okawa Prize in 2004, Prime Minister Award in 2005 and Japan Academy Prize in 2006.

Gérald Santucci, European Commission In July 2012 Gérald Santucci was appointed Head of the Unit Knowledge Sharing at the Infor-mation Society and Media Directorate-General of the European Commission. Between March 2007 and June 2011, he was Head of the Unit Networked Enterprise & Radio Frequency Identifi-cation (RFID) that managed a portfolio of some 50 Research and Innovation projects, grouped around two clusters: Future Internet Enterprise Systems (FInES) and Internet of Things (IERC). Under his leadership, the European Commission adopted in March 2007 a Communication on

RFID that constituted a landmark achievement to a European policy framework regarding RFID and the so-called Internet of Things. Work underway includes the monitoring of the EC Recommendation on the implementation of privacy and data protection principles in RFID-enabled applications (May 2009), with special emphasis on privacy and data protection impact assessments and on signage, the EC Communication on the Internet of Things (June 2009), and the second phase of the mandate to European Standardisation Organisations (ESOs) on privacy and security aspects of RFID (M/436). Gérald is the acting chairman of the Expert Group on the Internet of Things, composed of about 45 stakeholders from Law, Economics and Technology, which is tasked with advising the EC on Internet of Things evolution and associated public policy challenges. In addition, Gérald is highly committed to develop cooperation with Europe's international partners, such as Japan, China, Korea, U.S., Brazil and Australia, in order to promote the exchange of information and best practices and the definition of global or harmonised standards and regulations in the field of the Internet of Things. Over the years, Gérald has gained extensive experience in the activities of the Directorate-General through his involvement in research management, including heading the Unit “Applications relating to Administrations” 1999-2002, the Unit “Trust and Security” 2003, and "ICT for Enterprise Networking" 2004-2006.

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Demonstration Tuesday 19th June Wednesday 20th June Sala delle Colone The Exhibition will take place on 19-20 June in parallel to the IoT Week sessions in the main Hall of the venue. The technology exhibition will showcase IoT concepts and technologies coming from following research projects.

● IoT-A ● IoT@Work ● ELLIOT ● SmartSantander ● IoT6 ● PROBE IT ● ebbits

In addition a various number of posters will present the other projects and initiatives such as CASAGRAS2, BUR-BA, and the IoT International Forum. You will find detailed information about the IoT Week demonstrators in the dedicated leaflet available at the regis-tration.

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IoT Week Evening Event Tuesday 19th June 19:00 – 23:00 Scuola Grande San Giovanni Garden / Sala delle Colone The IoT Week 2012 participants are invited to a networking event in the Garden of the Scuola San Giovanni. Gourmet finger food, local and Italian premium wines will be served accompanied by a musical programme with internationally famed DJ and various entertainments. 19:00 – 20:00 Welcome cocktail followed by stand-up dinner Entertainment: music + artist performance

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Press Conference Tuesday, 19 June 1 p.m. Sala verde

Press Conference: A Growth Factor for Europe – Internet of Things

Why is the Internet of Things one of THE growth factors for Europe? This question and the current status of pro-jects and future activities within the European and international Internet of Things community will be addressed during a press conference.

The following people will be at the podium to inform and answer media enquiries:

Carlo Medaglia, Advisor to the Italian Minister of Instruction, University and Research Gerald Santucci, Head of Unit at the European Commission Ovidiu Vermesan, Representative of the “Internet of Things European Research Cluster” Ken Sakamura, University of Tokyo Sebastian Lange, VDI/VDE-IT, Organization committee and moderator

The press conference is open to the press as well as interested conference participants

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Participating projects / Initiatives:

IoT-A

IoT-A is the EU funded Lighthouse Integrated Project addressing the Internet-of-Things Architecture. IoT-A propos-es the creation of an architectural reference model together with the definition of an initial set of key building blocks. Using an experimental paradigm, IoT-A will combine top down reasoning about architectural principles and design guidelines with simulation and prototyping work to explore the technical consequences of architectural de-sign choices. IoT-A is a 3 year-project gathering 18 partners from 8 different European countries with following common objectives:

To provide an architectural reference model for the interoperability IoT systems, outlining principles and guidelines for the technical design of its protocols, interfaces and algorithms.

To assess existing IoT protocol suits and derive mechanisms to achieve end-to-end interoperability for seamless communication between IoT devices.

To develop modelling tools and a description language for goal-oriented IoT aware (business) process in-teractions allowing expression of their dependencies for a variety of deployment models.

To derive adaptive mechanisms for distributed orchestration of IoT resource interactions exposing self-properties in order to deal with the complex dynamics of real world environments.

To holistically embed effective and efficient security and privacy mechanisms into IoT devices and the pro-tocols and services they utilise

To develop a novel resolution infrastructure for the IoT, allowing scalable look up and discovery of IoT re-sources, entities of the real world and their associations.

To develop IoT device platform components including device hardware and run-time environment To validate the architectural reference model against the derived requirements and by implementation of

real life use cases that demonstrate the benefits of the developed solutions. To contribute to the dissemination and exploitation of the developed architectural foundations.

More Information on the project website www.iot-a.eu

IoT-i

The IoT initiative (IoT-i), a EU Framework Programme 7 project, started in September 2010, brings together key actors from all relevant but currently fragmented IoT communities in Europe to work jointly towards a common vi-sion of the Internet of Things. It represents the first serious attempt in building a unified IoT community in Europe, going across boundaries of disparate technology sectors, in order to create a joint European strategic vision of the Internet of Things and aligning this vision with the current developments on the Future Internet.

IoT-i pursues the achievement of the following strategic objectives:

Creating a joint strategic and technical vision for the IoT in Europe that encompasses the currently frag-mented sectors of the IoT domain holistically.

Contribute to the creation of an economically sustainable and socially acceptable environment in Europe for IoT technologies and respective R&D activities.

Creating an environment that favours international adoption of European IoT technology.

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IERC - European Research Cluster on the Internet of Things

IoT has the potential to enhance Europe's competitiveness and will be an important driver for the development of an information based economy and society. A wide range of research and application projects in Europe have been set up in different application fields. Communication between these projects is an essential requirement for a com-petitive industry and for a secure, safe and privacy preserving deployment of IoT in Europe. The IERC - IoT European Research Cluster - European Research Cluster on the Internet of Things is bringing to-gether EU-funded projects with the aim of defining a common vision and the IoT technology and development re-search challenges at the European level in the view of global development. The rationale for IoT is to address the large potential for IoT-based capabilities in Europe - coordinate/encourage the convergence of ongoing work on the most important issues - to build a broadly based consensus on the ways to realise IoT in Europe. The Cluster will link its activities with the activities of the IoT Expert Group that will start in June 2010 and will link the Cluster and Expert groups’ activities in order to minimise overlaps and maximize synergies and contributing to the overall Challenge 1 objectives The main objectives of the IERC are to:

Establish a cooperation platform and develop a research vision for IoT activities in Europe and become a major entry and contact point for IoT research in the world.

Define an international strategy for cooperation in the area of IoT research and have an overview of the re-search priorities at the global level.

Coordinate the cooperation activities with other EC Clusters and ICT projects. Coordinate and align the SRA agenda at the European level with the developments at the global level. Organise debates/workshops leading to a better understanding of IoT and Future Internet technology, and

adoption.

Casagras2

The need for authoritative, on-going international cooperation in respect of the European agenda for taking the concept of the Internet of Things (IoT) to reality is pivotal in putting it into the global context it de-mands. CASAGRAS2 provides the necessary conduit for taking the next steps in international collaboration.

CASAGRAS2 identifies a much broader base for international cooperation, with partners from Brazil, mainland China, India, Japan, Korea, Malaysia and USA. The European partners are from Belgium, France, Germany, Rus-sia and the UK. CASAGRAS2 has also identified a group of experts from many other parts of the world who will review and comment of key proposals and findings..

The coordination and support action plan for CASAGRAS2 draws upon the outcomes of CASAGRAS1 and the recommendations that specifically align with the targets identified in Objective ICT-2009-1.3: ICT Internet of Things and Enterprise environment. Moreover, it seeks to collaborate closely to the IoT-i project and to the European Re-search Cluster for the Internet of Things (IERC), offering an important holistic input characterised by the generic nature of the work packages in respect of architecture, identification and data capture protocols, applications and services framework, R&D roadmap, education and training and the important multi-dimensional features of govern-ance; all with respect to international deliberation. Each component of these work package activities will be devel-oped in cooperation with international partners through the international platform work package. Outcomes will be delivered through a dissemination infrastructure, exploiting a range of delivery platforms and serving a wide range

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of project, stakeholder and end-user delivery needs, with substantial foundations for innovation and enterprise in respect of applications, services and products, and socio-economic benefit.

iCore

iCore initiative addresses two key issues in the context of the Internet of Things (IoT), namely how to abstract the technological heterogeneity that derives from the vast amounts of heterogeneous objects, while enhancing reliabil-ity and how to consider the views of different users/stakeholders (owners of objects & communication means) for ensuring proper application provision, business integrity and, therefore, maximize exploitation opportunities.

The iCore proposed solution is a cognitive framework comprising three levels of functionality, reusable for various and diverse applications. The levels under consideration are virtual objects (VOs), composite virtual objects (CVOs) and functional blocks for representing the user/stakeholder perspectives. VOs are cognitive virtual representations of real‐world objects (e.g. sensors, devices, everyday objects) that hide the underlying technological heterogeneity. CVOs, on the other hand are cognitive mash‐ups of semantically interoperable VOs, delivering services in accord-ance with the user/stakeholder requirements. To validate the proposed solutions iCore addresses the following usecases: ambient assisted living, smart office, smart transportation, and supply chain management.

IoT6

IoT6 is a 3 years FP7 European research project. It aims at researching and exploiting the potential of the Internet Protocol version 6 (IPv6) and related standards (6LoWPAN, COAP, etc.) for the future Internet of Things.

IoT6 intends to develop a highly scalable IPv6-based Service-Oriented Architecture to integrate heterogeneous smart things components such as wireless sensors networks, building automation devices, RFID tags, and mobile phones. It intends to ease their integration with services, including cloud computing Software as a Service (SaaS) and Smart Things Information Services. IoT6 will investigate innovative forms of interactions among those hetero-geneous components.

The project integrates an end-user perspective with the targeted realization of a green and smart IPv6 building by Mandat International.

More information is available on www.iot6.eu

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BUTLER

BUTLER is a European research project emphasising pervasiveness, context-awareness and security for Internet of Things. Through a consortium of leading Industrial, Corporate R&D and Academic partners with extensive and complementary know-how, BUTLER integrates existing and develop new technologies to form a “bundle” of appli-cations, platform features and services that will bring IoT to life.

For this purpose, BUTLER focuses on:

a) Improving/creating enabling technologies to implement a well-defined vision of secure, pervasive and context-aware IoT, where links are inherently secure (from PHY to APP layers) applications cut across different scenarios (Home, Office, Transportation, Health, etc.), and the network reactions to users are adjusted to their needs (learned and monitored in real time).

b) Integrating/developing a new flexiblesmartDevice-centric network architecture where platforms (devices) function according to three well-defined categories: smartObject (sensors, actuators, gateways), smartMobile (user’s per-sonal device) and smartServers (providers of contents and services), interconnected over IPv6.

c) Building a series of field trials, which progressively integrate and enhance state-of-the-art technologies to show-case BUTLER’s secure, pervasive and context-aware vision of IoT.

PROBE-IT

PROBE-IT is a two years European project with international partners from China, Brazil and Africa that aims at supporting exploitation of European research advances in IoT deployments. It is indeed needed to ensure interop-erability and acceptance of validated IoT solutions in a global context to capitalize on Eu research progresses and secure investments in innovative technologies. For that, PROBE-IT focuses on analyzing existing and ongoing worldwide deployments in different perspectives, including assessment of technical validation approaches and filling the needs of policy makers, deployments drivers, technology providers and users.

PROBE-IT is addressing three different areas:

1. benchmarking of IoT deployments to provide stakeholders with decision tools aimed at identifying the best options when deploying or using IoT;

2. guidelines for stakeholders to plan IoT roll-out; 3. testing roadmaps and solutions to provide stakeholders with elements to validate technologies conform-

ance and interoperability.

PROBE-IT activities are being implemented into three consecutive phases:

1. Based on the state of the art, the first one creates the conceptual frameworks in each of the areas above.

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2. The second one conducts on the field assessments of these frameworks. It organises interoperability test events, workshops and a benchmark of 10 existing industrial IoT deployments.

3. Finally, the third one analyzes lessons learnt from these assessments to provide final versions of the benchmarking framework, the guidelines for IoT deployments and the interoperability and test-ing roadmaps.

The project will also ensure regular exchanges with the IoT communities in particular with active interaction with IERC , IoT forum and many more.

IoT@Work

One of the arguments for an Internet of Things (IoT) is allowing devices, machines, and objects to interact with each other without relying on human intervention to set-up and commission the embedded intelligence. IoT@Work is an EU project led by Siemens AG running within the ICT research programme. The project focuses on harness-ing IoT technologies in industrial and automation environments. It will use the FIAT Research Centre facilities (part of the largest industrial company in Italy) to develop an IoT based Plug&Work concept centered on industrial auto-mation. The consortium also includes several distinguished researchers from City University London, Lemgo‘s Insti-tut Industrial IT (inIT), European Microsoft Innovation Centre (EMIC), and TXT e-Solutions.

Challenges

The designers of industrial automation systems have always faced the challenge of configuring a highly complex and demanding communication network as well as an IT security subsystem.

This costly and often manual effort is critical in order to avoid failures that can lead to costly production interrup-tions (a single FIAT factory can produce a car each minute) or malfunction that can endanger involved humans.

Benefits

IoT@Work focuses on developing self-configuration mechanisms, enabling what we call secure Plug&Work IoT, whereby devices are auto-configured and ready to co-operate with each other as soon as they are plugged into the factory network, self-adapting to changes in response to demands, faults, etc.

IoT@Work Architecture

The main focus of IoT@Work will be the development of technologies required to enable IoT-based applications and processes in the manufacturing domain. The extension of already existing mechanisms and technologies to enable a secure Plug&Work IoT is main part of the research. Hence, this project will provide a significant contribu-tion for realizing adaptable manufacturing systems.

The current IoT@Work architecture is targeted at three basic layers, a layer for device and network embedded services, a layer for resource creation and management, and an application level middleware layer. The defined functionalities and components are able to support and simplify the configuration process, the device bootstrap-ping, as well as other remaining integration aspects.

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PLANET

The main objective of PLANET is the design, development and validation of an integrated platform to enable the deployment, operation and maintenance of large-scale/complex systems of heterogeneous networked Cooperating Objects, including Wireless Sensor and Actuator Networks and mobile objects. The platform will support optimal and adaptive deployment and operation by means of mobile cooperating objects, i.e. vehicles, networked with stat-ic nodes. The platform will be validated in two complementary scenarios: the monitoring of the Donyana Biological Reserve with very high ecological value and very sensitive to the impact of pollution, and the highly automated airfield scenario in which security plays an important role and where wireless communication and cooperative tech-niques pose significant challenges.

ebbits

The ebbits project does research in architecture, technologies and processes that allow businesses to semantically integrate the Internet of Things into mainstream enterprise systems and support online life cycle management.

The aim is to provide semantic resolution to the Internet of Things and thereby present a new bridge between back-end enterprise applications and the surrounding physical world.

This is achieved by establishing a communication infrastructure that automatically and dynamically connects to sensors and devices in the physical world and to mainstream back-end information systems, public authentication systems and regulatory information sources, providing data collecting and analysis for professional users as well as consumers.

The platform is based on a Service-oriented Architecture with open protocols and middleware where every subsys-tem or device is transformed into a web service using semantic technologies. The ebbits platform thus enables the convergence of the Internet of People, the Internet of Things and the Internet of Services into the “Internet of Peo-ple, Things and Services” for business purposes.

SmartSantander

SmartSantander aims at providing a European experimental test facility for the research and experimentation of architectures, key enabling technologies, services and applications for the Internet of Things (IoT) in the context of the smart city

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The SmartSantander project vision - SmartSantander aims at providing a European experimental test facility for the research and experimentation of architectures, key enabling technologies, services and applications for the Internet of Things (IoT) in the context of the smart city.”

SmartSantander proposes a unique in the world city-scale experimental research facility in support of typical appli-cations and services for a smart city. This unique experimental facility will be sufficiently large, open and flexible to enable horizontal and vertical federation with other experimental facilities and stimulates development of new ap-plications by users of various types including experimental advanced research on IoT technologies and realistic assessment of users’ acceptability tests. The facility will comprise more than 20,000 sensors and will be based on a real life IoT deployment in an urban setting. The core of the facility will be located in the city of Santander, the capi-tal of the region of Cantabria situated on the north coast of Spain, and its surroundings. SmartSantander will enable the Future Internet of Things to become a reality.

More info about the project is available at the web site: http://www.smartsantander.eu

GAMBAS

The main objective of GAMBAS is to develop an innovative and adaptive data acquisition and processing middle-ware to enable the privacy-preserving and automated use of behaviour-driven services that are able to adapt au-tonomously to the context of their users.

GAMBAS is geared towards addressing the complete set of challenges in order to provide a truly integrated solu-tion, thereby closing a significant gap between today’s systems and the vision of ubiquitous computing. Towards this end, the primary result of the project is the realization of a Generic Adaptive Middleware, i.e. a set of applica-tion-independent services, to support the development and utilization of Behavior-driven Autonomous Services.

As depicted below, the GAMBAS middleware will enable the development of novel applications and Internet-based services that utilize context information in order to adapt to the behaviour of the user autonomously. To do this, the middleware will provide the means to gather context in a generic, yet resource-efficient manner and it will support the privacy-preserving sharing of the acquired data. Thereby, it will apply interoperable data representations which support scalable processing of data gathered from a large number of connected objects. In order to make the re-sulting novel services accessible to the user, the middleware will also support intent-aware interaction by providing a constant stream of relevant recommendations for services.

OpenIoT

OpenIoT project focus on providing an open source middleware framework enabling the dynamic formulation of self-managed cloud environments for IoT applications.

The OpenIoT middleware framework will therefore serve as a blueprint for non-trivial IoT applications, which will be delivered in an autonomic fashion and according to a utility model based on clouds infrastructures.

OpenIoT is perceived as a natural extension to cloud computing implementations, which will allow access to addi-tional and increasingly important IoT based resources and capabilities. In particular, OpenIoT will research and

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provide the means for formulating and managing environments comprising IoT resources, which can deliver on-demand utility IoT services such as sensing as a service as an example.

OpenIoT is pertinent to a wide range of interrelated scientific and technological areas spanning: (a) Middleware for sensors and sensor networks, (b) Ontologies, semantic models and annotations for representing internet-connected objects, along with semantic open-linked data techniques (c) Cloud/Utility computing, including utility based security and privacy schemes.

OpenIoT is a joint effort of prominent open source contributors towards enabling a new range of open large-scale intelligent IoT (Internet-of- things) applications according to a utility cloud computing delivery model.

HOBNET

The main objective of HOBNET is to ease and maximize the use of FIRE platforms by multidisciplinary developers of Future Internet applications focused on automation and energy efficiency for smart/green buildings.

The project's research addresses algorithmic, networking and application development aspects of Future Internet systems of tiny embedded devices: a) an all IPv6/6LoWPAN infrastructure of buildings and how IPv6 can integrate heterogeneous technology (sensors, actuators, mobile devices etc) b) 6lowApp and its standardization towards a new embedded application protocol for building automation c) novel algorithmic models and scalable solutions for energy efficiency and radiation-awareness, data dissemination, localization and mobility d) rapid development and integration of building management applications e) support for the deployment and monitoring of resulting applica-tions on FIRE test beds.

Key research innovations will be experimentally validated at an integrated platform of a large scale smart building proof of concept application, in two buildings of a UN related foundation in Geneva and two existing FIRE test-beds. The buildings will act as source of research challenges for smart services like energy optimization, control access, safety, audio/video provision and automatic control. Developed algorithms and technology solutions will be tested via deploying large numbers of diverse smart devices at the buildings and FIRE test-beds. These tests will also provide real data traces towards accurate models. A repository of implemented algorithms and a multipurpose building automation demonstration for connecting with external activities will be provided.

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BURBA (Bottom up selection, collection and management of URBAn waste)

The main objective of the Environment Theme, according to FP7 Specific Programme, addressed by BURBA is to promote sustainable management of the natural and human environment and its resources by advancing our knowledge on the interactions between the biosphere, ecosystem and human activities, and developing new technologies, tools and services, in order to address in an integrated way global environmental issues.

Waste management is an urgent problem in urban environments. Therefore, a more efficient and sustainable waste management system promotes higher life quality and fewer costs for the city authorities and less impact on the environment.

So the aim of BURBA project is to develop an automatic system to be used for intelligent waste management. The system consists of intelligent waste containers and IT tool for waste collection and transport management. It will include both RFID’s (Radio Frequency Identification) and cell-based-phone LBS’ (Local-Based service) abilities. RFID will allow to reliably identifying individual receptacles, users, single marked items or waste categories, while LBS will allow an easy identification of the location of the most suitable waste container and an improvement of its utilization by the citizen (it permits to choose the closest one to user actual position, not full, for that waste catego-ry, etc).

BURBA rugged system will be integrated into “intelligent waste containers” with capacities of 600 litres and over, for urban and industrial waste collection. The foreseen IT tool will manage appropriately position and time of collection and optimize truck fleet path and queuing to waste disposal plants (for example incinerators that need continuous adequate feeding in quantity and quality); as well as the differential waste disposal to feed recycling facilities. It will so far contribute to improve the management of the waste transport vehicle fleet, to minimise transportation path and diminish fuel expenditures as well as optimise gain of disposal plants and service to citizens and industrial companies avoiding overfilled containers.

IoT International Forum The IoT International Forum is a pre-competitive collaborative Forum for the development and promotion of the IoT domain as a whole. It is a non-commercial organisation, open to all actors from the global IoT domain, or with an interest in the IoT domain. This includes technology companies, service providers, academics, governmental organisations, NGOs and interest groups, policy makers, and investors. The fundamental belief of the Forum is that a common Internet of Things has the potential to bring large scale so-cietal benefits, and ease the long term technological burden, beyond the gains of diverse intranets of things. Goals The IoT International Forum will address the following challenges:

Strategy

- Identify strategic directions for future applications, research and development

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- Identify and mitigate barriers to adoption - Identify and influence strategic directions for regulation & standardisation - Investigate markets and business opportunities

Community building

- Provide a meeting point for the IoT community and potential IoT users from the relevant application and technology domains

- Be a platform for exchange of visions, ideas and advances in IoT thinking, governance, applications, tech-nology, research and standardisation

Encouraging Investment

- Provide information about possible funding opportunities - Foster the creation of new collaborations and endeavours - Be a source of intelligence for funding bodies to direct their programmes

State of the Art

- Act as one-stop-shop for state of the art in strategic, technical, societal, legal, standardisation aspects of IoT

- Disseminate and educate via publications, seminars, workshops, demonstrations

Working Groups Much of the collaboration within the Forum will take place in its Working Groups. Currently there are four WGs within the Forum. Working Group Societal The Societal Working Group provides a forum for the exchange of trends, challenges and barriers relating to socie-tal matters around the Internet of Things. By sharing viewpoints between global societal experts, interest groups and stakeholders at an early stage in the evolution of IoT, the Societal Working Group aims to understand concerns, societal barriers and trends from the various members and associated groups and use this as an input to the other Working Groups. The Societal WG will collect an IoT application portfolio to identify applications supported by the IoT impacting so-ciety at large. These will cover any application sector and interest group that will be identified in the WG. However, focus will be primarily on the following sectors as a starting point:

Health (including fitness and wellness) Energy Transport and Mobility Culture Industry and manufacturing Environment Agriculture, mining and natural resources

The Societal WG will engage in spotting societal trends by horizon scanning. Global trends such as “the Digital Divide”, “Unemployment”, “Global Warming”, “Hunger”, “Poverty” and “Ageing Society” as well as potentially finan-cial crises, disasters and other topics will be associated to the IoT domain and links will be established how IoT can help address the challenge, but also how IoT might present a negative impact.

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Feeding from societal trends, the Societal WG will analyse the impact of IoT in terms of the environmental and the labour market. Working Group Economics The Economics Working Group provides a forum for the analysis of economic and business aspects relating to the development and implementation of the Internet of Things. Identification and study of the economic context and implications is essential in order to foster the successful, fast, yet sustainable incorporation of IoT technologies into the real world. Exchange of opinions and debates on the po-tential models and the actions to ensure economic efficiency through these technologies will allow “exporting” spe-cific or tailor-made models to other, more general, geographical or thematic scopes. The Economics WG aims to collect and identify all potential IoT applications or services that may be of interest in terms of the business aspects. In fact, possibly all the IoT applications should have an economic analysis, as business model or economic sustainability should be always assessed, even when (monetary) profitability is not the key target of an application (as often is the case in “Health” or other public services such as "Security", "Envi-ronment", etc.) These applications will cover any application sector and interest group that will be identified in the WG. A non-exhaustive enumeration, trying to list more important topics first, could be as follows:

Energy Industry and manufacturing Transport and mobility Logistics and distribution channels Finance, banking and payment services Agriculture, mining and natural resources Environment Health (including fitness and wellness)

Working Group Technology (including Architecture) The Technology Working Group provides a forum for the exchange of ideas relating to technology matters in the Internet of Things, primarily focusing on those technologies and architectures that are emerging from the research community and that will soon be ready for exploitation by product/service developers in real applications/services and secondly supporting research in disruptive and gap technologies and architectures. By sharing viewpoints be-tween global IoT technology experts and stakeholders at an early stage in the evolution of IoT architectures and technology solutions, the Technology Working Group aims to influence and harmonise future technical IoT activi-ties. While the main focus is on technology that is nearly ready to be transferred from the research lab to deployable systems, the WG will also expose future technical directions for IoT through identification of ideas that are still at a very early stage of development. For IoT Architectures the overall aim is to reduce fragmentation and promote coherency among the various organi-sations that are involved in IoT architecture development. Relevant activities include:

Design and evolution of the IoT reference model Interaction, collaboration and coordination with focussed international IoT research activities in EU, China,

Japan, USA, Korea, Australia, etc. Contribution to Future Internet activities where IoT is an important architectural component

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There is a diversity of IoT Technologies where the Technology WG will aim to exchange ideas, including:

Efficient communications, from novel radio technologies to optimised networking solutions Semantic frameworks for information extraction and description of IoT services and objects Advances in resource-constrained platforms for improved energy and resource management Management frameworks to facilitate provisioning, deployment and operation of heterogeneous IoT devic-

es and services Cross-domain solutions to enable horizontalised and federated operation of IoT systems with complex

ownership regimes Service enablers to support application development and business process integration Cybersecurity approaches to address cyber threats to real world deployments of IoT systems Privacy enhancement techniques to protect individuals’ information Accounting Frameworks to support commercial services and audit trails

The Technology WG will also address Standardisation and Regulation, and in particular:

Obtain briefings on current global activities Identify gaps where future harmonisation is desirable

The WG will also assign some time to identifying future trends and potential breakthroughs, including

Horizon scanning to identify IoT technologies that may be significant in the future Identification of potentially disruptive technologies

WG Legislation and Governance The Legislation and Governance Working Group provides a forum for discussions, brainstorming and analysis of and about the legislative and governance aspects of the Internet of Things. By sharing viewpoints between global legislation and governance experts, stakeholders, and policy makers at an early stage in the evolution of IoT, the Legislation and Governance WG aims to understand constraints upon the development and deployment of IoT, and assist policy makers in identifying appropriate legal and governance re-gimes to enable beneficial and responsible roll out of the IoT. The following gives an outline of topics that are within the scope of the Legislation and Governance WG.

The necessity for one or more legal frameworks for the Internet of Things, and different approaches to this: - Self regulation / soft law and the Societal control model (normatively appropriate human behaviour) - National / Regional legal framework - International legal framework - Identification and establishment of bodies to set and enforce legislation The relationship between traditional Internet governance approaches and governing bodies, and the Inter-

net of Things. Principles of the governance of IoT: - Legitimacy, fairness and inclusion - Transparency - Accountability Other challenges to be discussed include: - Respect of consumer's interests - Security, privacy and trust - Interoperability - Availability and reliability - Neutrality - Ethics

Monday 18.6.2012 IERC DAY EU Project Presentations

09:00 -09:45 IERC Intro Intro to IERC and lates info on AC activity Vermesan, Friess

09:45-10:00 Coffee Break

10:00 -12:00 IoT Cognitive technologies IERC AC 14 CASAGRASII Intro to international IoT activties

icore CASAGRASII, Ian Smith

12:00 - 12:30 European Commission and IoT “Sailing towards the future”

Bernard Barani, Peter Friess European Commission

12:30-13:30 Lunch

13:00-16:15 IoT Architecture Developing and agreeing on joint architecture approches for IoT

IoT for Energy Efficient Buildings

Presentations from FP7-funded projects

IoT-A FP7 STREP Project HOBNET

16:15-16:30 Coffee Break

16:30-19:00 IoT Exploitation IERC - AC 11, IoT@Work / EBBITS

Open session on Ethics / Privacy

organised by IOT-I EIoTA Session Intro to EIoTA, restricted

Hoyou Rob v. Kranenburg Ian Smith

20:00-23:00

Tuesday 19.6.2012 Opening Day

09:00 -10:30 IoT Week / IoT International Forum -Opening

IoT week & IoT Forum

10:30-10:45 Coffee Break

10:45-12:00 IoT Week / IoT International Forum -Opening

12:00-13:00 Lunch

13:00-16:00 The Internet of Things - Where is it going? A global overview

Ian Smith and Philippe Cousin

EC internal meeting EC BUTLER EMG meeting Org: Friedbert Berens, restricted

IERC AC4 semantic interoperability

Philippe Cousin IoT-A WP2 Session restricted

IoT-A WP2 Session restricted

16:00-16:30 Coffee Break

16:30-19:00 Implementing IoT Presenting first IoT implementations, Use cases and demonstrations

Public IoT expert group meeting

EC Privacy & security workshop

IERC AC 05 IERC AC4 semantic interoperability

Philippe Cousin IoT-A Cross-WP4/WP7 Meeting

restricted

A. Houyou, IoT@Work Trevor Peirce19:30-23:00 IoT Week Evening Event

Wednesday 20.6.2012

Projects, Experts and Stakeholders

08:00-09:00 IoT-A TSC Meeting (8:00-9:00)

restricted

09:00 -10:30 IoT Enabling Technologies Preparing roadmaps for IoT enabling technologies

EC internal meeting EC, restricted IoT A Stakeholder WS restricted IERC AC4 semantic interoperability

Philippe Cousin

10:30-10:45 Coffee Break

10:45-12:30 IoT Enabling Technologies Butler EC internal meeting EC, restricted IoT A Stakeholder WS restricted IERC AC4 semantic interoperability

Philippe Cousin Governance session for multi-National commercial organisations

Ian Smith

12:30-13:30 Lunch

13:30-16:00 IPv6 and IoT The potential interactions between IPv6 and the future IoT.

EC internal meeting EC, restricted IoT A Stakeholder WS restricted iCore ESG meeting restricted

IoT6 and 6DEPLOY-2

16:00-16:30 Coffee Break

16:30-19:00 IoT Forum WG Technology Benchmarking IoT deployments

Workshop on 'benchmarking frameworks for IoT deployments'

IoT A Stakeholder WS restricted iCore PMT meeting session

restricted IoT-A - WP 5 + WP5/7 Joachim Trescher , restricted

probe-it

Sala Verde Saletta StucchiSalone San Giovanni Oratorio della Croce Sala dell'albergo Sala Azzura

Press conference

Thursday 21.6.2012

Forum

09:00 -11:00 IoT Forum WG Economics IoT Everything Linked: From the sensors to the cloud

GAMBAS, OpenIOT, PLANET and SmartSantander

CASAGRAS final partner meeting

restricted EU-China IoT expert group

IoT6 internal meeting

11:00-11:30 Coffee Break

11:30 - 13:00 IoT Forum WG societal IoT Everything Linked: From the sensors to the cloud

CASAGRAS final partner meeting

restricted IoT6 internal meeting

13:00-14:00 Lunch

14:00-15:30 IoT Forum WG Societal IoT Everything Linked: From the sensors to the cloud

IoT/ RFID and Waste Management

BURBA Project CASAGRAS final partner meeting

restricted EU-Taiwan IoT6 internal meeting

15:30-16:00 Coffee Break IoT/ RFID and Waste Management

BURBA Project

16:00-18:00 IoT Forum WG Legislation & Governance

IoT Everything Linked: From the sensors to the cloud

iCORE / China Meeting restricted CASAGRAS final partner meeting

restricted EU-Taiwan IoT6 internal meeting

18:00 - 19:00 Wrap-up & Sustainability of the forum

Friday 22.6.2012 Wrap Up09:00 -12:00 CASAGRAS Review

MeetingHOBNET Review Meeting

11:00-11:30 Coffee Break

CASAGRAS Review Meeting

HOBNET Review Meeting

12:00-13:00 Lunch

13:00-16:00 HOBNET Review Meeting

15:30-16:00 Coffee Break

16:00-19:00 HOBNET Review Meeting

WP1 - IoT-A

WP1 - IoT-A

WP1 - IoT-A

WP1 - IoT-A

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