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EU cooperation, EU projects and their implications Simone Fischer-Hübner Karlstad University.

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Presentation on theme: "EU cooperation, EU projects and their implications Simone Fischer-Hübner Karlstad University."— Presentation transcript:

1 EU cooperation, EU projects and their implications Simone Fischer-Hübner Karlstad University

2 Major EU Research Projects at Karlstad University Current EU FP6/FP7 Projects: EU FP7 integrated Project PrimeLife EU FP7 Network of Excellence NEWCOM++ (Third Party) EU FP6 integrated Project DAIDALOS II EU FP6 Network of Excellence FIDIS Past EU Projects: EU FP6 integrated Project PRIME (2004-2008) EU FP6 Projects WINNER and WINNER II (Third Party, 2004-2007) EU FP6 NoE NEWCOM (2004-2007) EU Celtic/Eureka BUGYO (2005-2007)

3 Bringing Sustainable Privacy and Identity Management to Future Networks and Services Fundamentally understanding privacy-enhancing identity management ‘for life’ Bringing Privacy to the future web Develop and make tools for privacy friendly identity management widely available – privacy live! http://www.primelife.eu/ Start date: 01 March 2008, Duration: 36 Months Total cost: 15.065,056 €, Total EC Funding: 10.200,000 € Example:

4 Vision: Privacy, Trust and ID Management In the Information Society, users can act and interact in a safe and secure way while retaining control of their private spheres

5 PrimeLife: Making PRIME real Beyond data minimization: Address data-intensive scenarios and user-generated content (Web 2.0, virtual communities such as Friendster, SecondLife)‏ Trust building and enforceable data protection (end-to-end policies)‏ Real life privacy (and throughout life)‏ Research focus on main problem uncovered by PRIME: HCI, Policies, and Infrastructures (and some mechanisms) Make privacy-enhancing identity management widely available: Infrastructures, Open Source, and Standards Cooperation with other Projects (Master, TAS3, SWIFT,... ), Education (summer schools, …) Advance State of the Art significantly once again!

6 Experiences gained Benefits Opportunities to have cooperation with leading European researchers/research labs Leading EU projects have greater impact/visibility than national projects Large resourses available for long time periods NoEs offer more academic freedom, attractive for PhD students Challenges/Issues High costs (travelling, personnel) for writing proposals Selective review process Consortium Agreement/Negotiations are critical Administrative overhead. However, for large projects good planning and reporting are essential Much travelling necessary. Schedules are conflicting with Swedish vacation periods Celtic: Strict conditions for participation of Swedish Universities by VINNOVA

7 Recommendations for writing a Proposal Attend EC workshops for defining research priorities for research programmes Attend IST networking events Keep close contact to EC officials in charge Write/review proposal in a team in a good time Consortium should have a good mix of participants from academia, industry (large companies, SMEs), and (possibly) public authorities from different countries/regions Better chances if key players are involved, or if proposal builds on a successful previous project Good management important already in the project drafting phase

8 Means for Cooperation between Swedish Universities Cooperate within a Consortium (e.g, as equal partners or third party/contracter constellations) Share experiences with regard to financial & legal issues Open PhD events (Summer Schools) for external participants Joint workshops of EU projects with related (national) projects

9 Discussion Your Experiences ? Further Possibilities for Cooperation ?

10 Erasmus – Lifelong Learning Programme IPICS (Intensive Programme on Information and Communication Security) 2008/2009


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