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DTSTART:19700308T020000
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DTSTAMP:20250822T115804Z
LOCATION:Room 6.0D13
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Stockholm:20250618T090000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Stockholm:20250618T093000
UID:submissions.pasc-conference.org_PASC25_sess114_msa179@linklings.com
SUMMARY:How Can a Standard Architecture for Trusted Research Environments 
 (SATRE) Provide a Framework for HPC?
DESCRIPTION:Simon Li (University of Dundee, HDR UK); Ed Chalstrey and Matt
 hew Craddock (The Alan Turing Institute); James Hetherington and Tim Machi
 n (University College London); Jim Madge, Martin O'Reilly, James Robinson,
  and Hari Sood (The Alan Turing Institute); Nel Swanepoel (University Coll
 ege London); and Christian Cole (University of Dundee)\n\nTrusted Research
  Environments (TREs) are secure computing environments suitable for the pr
 ocessing and analysis of special category data. The Standard Architecture 
 for Trusted Research Environments (SATRE) is a UK community driven specifi
 cation for how TREs, also known as Secure Data Environments or Secure Proc
 essing Environments, should be operated. The project followed open-collabo
 ration principles from the very start, holding regular public events throu
 gh which 60 organisations from across the UK shared their views, ultimatel
 y leading to the publication of the SATRE specification in October 2023. T
 hrough being driven by the community, and the incorporation of requirement
 s defined by public members, SATRE has gained widespread support across mu
 ltiple disciplines and stakeholders in the UK. SATRE has also been adopted
  within the EOSC-ENTRUST federation of TREs. SATRE, therefore, provides a 
 high-level framework within which HPC implementations can comply, reducing
  the need to design completely bespoke HPC systems for sensitive data rese
 arch. Applying the specification enables the alignment of HPC with TRE ope
 rators’ requirements thereby allowing scaling out of resource within exist
 ing governance frameworks. Here, we will describe the SATRE specification,
  it’s application within the UK ecosystem, and its relevance to HPC resour
 ces nationally and internationally.\n\nDomain: Applied Social Sciences and
  Humanities, Life Sciences, Computational Methods and Applied Mathematics\
 n\nSession Chairs: Christian Cole (University of Dundee) and James Hetheri
 ngton (University College London)\n\n
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