Note: The venue location is at the very bottom of the page!
The e-Infrastructure Reflection Group (e-IRG) organises two open workshops every year, each under the auspices of the corresponding presidency of the EU Council. The Swedish EU Presidency will be the first post-Covid-19 e-IRG Workshop organised as a fully face-to-face event and will bring together e-IRG stakeholders in Malmo, Sweden.
Day 1 - Wednesday 21 June 2023, 09:00-12:00
20 years of e-IRG Anniversary event
e-IRG will celebrate its 20 years anniversary since the first e-IRG workshop in June 2003 in Athens with a dedicated session. The session will have a short overview on the historical evolution of e-IRG, its contribution and impact to the current e-infrastructure landscape in Europe and beyond, and then focus on the key issues that need to be dealt with in the years ahead. This will include all e-Infrastructure areas and their tight cooperation for the benefit of the end users, such as leading-edge hyperconnectivity via GEANT and the NRENs, EOSC with its underlying federated European and national e-Infrastructures including National Open Science initiatives and NGIs, and the needed steps for EOSC to become an indispensable tool for both the end users and providers, the cutting-edge EuroHPC supercomputing and quantum communications/computing infrastructure and services ecosystem, and finally the Common European Data Spaces and their federation via the SIMPL middleware. The vision of e-IRG on "facilitating integration in the area of European e-Infrastructures and connected services, within and between member states, at the European level and globally", not only continues to apply, but in fact is timelier than ever, requiring strong interplay among all e-Infrastructures stakeholders.
Day 2 - Thursday 22 June 2023
1. Session 1 - "Authentication and Authorisation Infrastructures coordination in the ERA and beyond", 09:00-11:00
Authentication and Authorisation Infrastructures (AAI) is major area requiring a common global ecosystem for identity and access control across all relevant e-Infrastructures, spanning from EOSC and EuroHPC, but possibly expanding to new areas such as the European Data Spaces and the SIMPL framework. Significant effort has been devoted in this area, starting with blueprint architectures followed up by concrete implementations and adaptors that have been developed. As highlighted in the e-IRG White Paper 2022 following a questionnaire to all major e-Infrastructure-related initiatives, there are multiple providers and more effort is needed to make AAI more user friendly and transparent, especially when using services across all these different service providers. The session will discuss the current developments in AAI and the need for coordination and interoperability across all the different service providers, including EOSC, EuroHPC, EU Data Spaces as well as thematic or public sector ones.
2. Session 2 - "Cybersecurity and critical infrastructures", 11:30-13:00
The NIS-2 Directive pertains to safeguarding the security of vital Digital Infrastructures, which are crucial for sustaining society. These infrastructures encompass various industries such as healthcare, power generation and transmission, and with specific importance to e-IRG research and education. Specifically for e-Infrastructures in the research domain and in particular NRENs and NGIs, the NIS-2 Directive mandates that government agencies in the domain of Digital Infrastructures (e.g. those providing TLD management, DNS and Cloud computing service and Data centre services, and Trust services) should adhere to its requirements, meaning that most e-Infrastructures in the research domain fall under its purview.
The obligations set forth by the NIS-2 Directive are generally reasonable and expected as part of regular work, but it is crucial to document and demonstrate compliance. The NIS-2 Directive also requires regular audits of compliance, making it imperative for e-Infrastructures to be well-prepared. To this end, some essential steps e-Infrastructures can take include establishing contacts with their national government, appointing a coordinator for compliance and reporting, evaluating their current security baseline status, identifying their obligations under the NIS-2 Directive, and comprehending the necessary measures to bring their organization up to the required level.
3. Session 3 - "Coordination among generic and thematic infrastructures in the new ERA", 14:00-16:00
e-IRG has been working on the topic of coordination between thematic (vertical) and generic (horizontal) infrastructures at institutional, national, regional and EU levels, as well as among the generic infrastructures themselves for quite some time now. It has published the e-IRG National Nodes document in 2019 and the e-IRG White Papers 2021 and 2022. In this session, and the next period, e-IRG will shift the focus back to the better cooperation between generic (domain-agnostic) e-Infrastructures and thematic (domain-specific) Research Infrastructures and the planned cooperation between ESFRI, EOSC and e-IRG, including through the upcoming ESFRI-EOSC joint Task Force. In particular, attention will be given to the important role of e-Infrastructures and Research Infrastructures in EOSC. This area is also well-connected to the Research Infrastructure high-level presidency event on The Potential of Research Data: How Research Infrastructures Provide New Opportunities and Benefits for Society. Finally, as highlighted in the December 2022 e-IRG Prague workshop, liaison and interoperability among the EU thematic Data Spaces and the transversal EOSC Data Space is required and the role of e-Infrastructures in this link needs to be highlighted.
Looking forward to a fruitful workshop
Stefan Hanslik, e-IRG Chair, Sverker Holmgren, e-IRG co-Chair/Chalmers University, Malin Sandström, Swedish Research Council
Fotis Karayannis, Jan Wiebelitz, e-IRG Support Project