CALL FOR PAPERS May 11-14,2003 The Claremont Resort Oakland, California, USA 2003 IEEE Symposium on Security and Privacy sponsored by IEEE Computer Society Technical Committee on Security and Privacy in cooperation with The International Association for Cryptologic Research (IACR)
Symposium Committee: General Chair: Bob Blakley (IBM Software Group - Tivoli Systems, USA) (bblakley @us.ibm.com) Vice Chair: Lee Badger (Network Associates Labs, USA) Program Co-Chairs: Steven M. Bellovin (AT&T Research, USA) David A. Wagner (University of California at Berkeley, USA) Since 1980, the IEEE Symposium on Security and Privacy has been the premier forum for the presentation of developments in computer security and electronic privacy, and for bringing together researchers and practitioners in the field. Previously unpublished papers offering novel research contributions in any aspect of computer security or electronic privacy are solicited for submission to the 2003 symposium. Papers may represent advances in the theory, design, implementation, analysis, or empirical evaluation of secure systems, either for general use or for specific application domains. Topics of interest include, but are not limited to, the following: Commercial and Industrial Security Electronic Privacy Mobile Code and Agent Security Distributed Systems Security Network Security Anonymity Data Integrity Access Control and Audit Information Flow Security Verification Viruses and Other Malicious Code Security Protocols Authentication Biometrics Smartcards Peer-to-Peer Security Intrusion Detection Database Security Language-Based Security Denial of Service Security of Mobile Ad-Hoc Networks Program Committee: Martin Abadi (University of California Santa Cruz, USA) Marc Dacier (Eurecom, France) Drew Dean (SRI, USA) Barbara Fox (Microsoft, USA) Virgil Gligor (University of Maryland, USA) Peter Gutmann (University of Auckland, New Zealand) John Ioannidis (AT&T, USA) Trent Jaeger (IBM, USA) Paul Karger (IBM, USA) Dick Kemmerer (University of California Santa Barbara, USA) John McLean (Naval Research Laboratory, USA) Vern Paxson (ICSI, USA) Michael Roe (Microsoft, UK) Avi Rubin (AT&T, USA) John Rushby (SRI, USA) Paul Syverson (Naval Research Laboratory, USA) INSTRUCTIONS FOR PAPER SUBMISSIONS Submitted papers must not substantially overlap papers that have been published or that are simultaneously submitted to a journal or a conference with proceedings. Papers should be in Portable Document Format (.pdf) or Postscript (.ps), at most 15 pages excluding the bibliography and well-marked appendices (using 11-point font, single column format, and reasonable margins on 8.5"x11" or A4 paper), and at most 25 pages total. We request the submissions be in US letter paper size (not A4) if at all possible. Authors submitting papers in PDF are urged to follow the NSF "Fastlane" guidelines for document preparation ( http://www.fastlane.nsf.gov/a1/pdfcreat.htm ), and to pay special attention to unusual fonts. Committee members are not required to read the appendices, so the paper should be intelligible without them. Papers should be submitted in a form suitable for anonymous review: remove author names and affiliations from the title page, and avoid explicit self-referencing in the text. Instructions on electronic submission will appear shortly at http://www.research.att.com/~smb/oakland03-cfp.html . For any questions, please contact the program chairs, at [EMAIL PROTECTED] Paper submissions due: November 6, 2002 Acceptance notification: January 29, 2003 Submissions received after the submission deadline or failing to conform to the guidelines above risk rejection without consideration of their merits. Authors are responsible for obtaining appropriate clearances; authors of accepted papers will be asked to sign IEEE copyright release forms. Where possible all further communications to authors will be via email. PANEL PROPOSALS The conference may include panel sessions addressing topics of interest to the computer security community. Proposals for panels should be no longer than five pages in length and should include possible panelists and an indication of which of those panelists have confirmed participation. Please submit panel proposals by email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] Panel proposals due: November 6, 2002 Acceptance notification: January 21, 2003 Where possible all further communications to authors will be via email. 5-MINUTE TALKS A continuing feature of the symposium will be a session of 5-minute talks, where attendees can present preliminary research results or summaries of works published elsewhere. Poster presentations related to these talks are also possible. Abstracts for 5-minute talks should fit on one 8.5"x11" or A4 page, including the title and all author names and affiliations. Please submit abstracts by email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] 5-minute abstracts due: March 17, 2003 Acceptance notification: March 31, 2003 Where possible all further communications to authors will be via email. --Steve Bellovin, http://www.research.att.com/~smb (me) http://www.wilyhacker.com ("Firewalls" book) --------------------------------------------------------------------- The Cryptography Mailing List Unsubscribe by sending "unsubscribe cryptography" to [EMAIL PROTECTED]