Last chance to submit your applied networking research – ANRW deadline extended 
until 17 May 2019.

Colin



> On 3 May 2019, at 14:49, Colin Perkins <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> Call for Papers
> 
> ACM/IRTF Applied Networking Research Workshop 2019 (ANRW’19)
> 
> July 22, 2019
> Montreal, Canada
> 
> *** DEADLINE IN ONE WEEK ***
> 
> The ACM and IRTF Applied Networking Research Workshop 2019 (ANRW ’19) is an 
> academic workshop that provides a forum for researchers, vendors, network 
> operators, and the Internet standards community to present and discuss 
> emerging results in applied networking research. The workshop offers an 
> opportunity for academics to transition research back into IETF standards and 
> protocols and to find inspiration from topics and open problems discussed at 
> the IETF. The workshop will consist of a mix of invited talks, submitted 
> talks, and submitted short papers.
> 
> Submitted talks are not-for-publication resubmissions of works that have been 
> published elsewhere during the last 12 months. The goal here is to increase 
> impact of previously published work. For a talk to be considered for 
> presentation, please submit an extended abstract that is no longer than 2 
> pages.
> Short papers are publications that present new research that has not been 
> previously published. For a short paper to be considered for publication, 
> please submit work describing early/emerging results in a relevant topic 
> area. There is a 6-page limit for short papers.
> 
> ANRW ’19 particularly encourages the submission of results that could form 
> the basis for future engineering work in the IETF, that could help better 
> specify Internet protocols, that could change operational Internet practices, 
> or that could influence further research and experimentation in the IRTF. 
> ANRW ‘19 is sponsored by ACM SIGCOMM, and the Internet Research Task Force 
> (IRTF).
> 
> Topics of Interest include, but are not limited to, applied work in the 
> following areas:
> Development and deployment of new and improved transport protocols, secure 
> protocols, routing protocols
> Measurement and analysis of existing and new transport protocols, secure 
> protocols, and routing protocols
> Practical congestion control for heterogeneous networks and novel applications
> Improvements to the security and privacy of Internet protocols
> Measuring and understanding the behavior and transparency of the Internet, 
> including censorship
> Deployment and evolution of DNS, CDNs, anycast, and other wide-area services
> Measurements and analysis of wide-area privacy risks and remediation
> Approaches and efforts towards decentralizing and democratizing the Internet
> Internet access in challenging environments
> Protocols and APIs for new Internet applications
> Better ways of specifying protocols, including usable techniques for protocol 
> verification
> Evolution of interconnection, and network management practices
> Integration of programmable networking into the wide area
> Interactions between emergent applications and existing network deployments
> Approaches for wide-area monitoring, root-cause analysis, and debugging
> New approaches to network management, operations, and control
> Topics relevant to the standardization activities of related IETF working 
> groups
> Topics relevant to activity in related IRTF research groups.
> 
> Submission Types
> 
> ANRW ’19 accepts two types of submissions: talks and short papers. 
> Submissions are not anonymous. Authors of accepted talks and short papers may 
> also bring a poster presenting its content to the workshop, for display and 
> more in-depth discussion with interested participants during the breaks.
> 
> Talks:
> Talk submissions are not-for-publication resubmissions of works that have 
> been published elsewhere during the last 12 months. They may contain up to 
> two pages of technical content, including figures, tables, appendices, 
> optionally followed by unlimited additional pages for references and 
> acknowledgements only. The two page limit is strictly enforced, even a single 
> line exceeding two pages will lead to rejection without review. We expect 
> talk submissions to describe the research at a high enough level to assess 
> whether a talk on the topic would be suitable for the audience. Authors may 
> also optionally attach the published paper or technical report backing the 
> submission; this attachment is for reference only and may not be reviewed.
> Accepted talks can be presented without publication; however, authors can 
> publish their extended abstract in the ACM Digital Library if desired.
> 
> Short papers:
> Short paper submissions are suitable for short position papers, for starting 
> a discussion on new technical ideas, to present very early results, or to 
> present other topics of interest to the community (software and tools, 
> research initiatives or collaborative projects, major new funding vessels, 
> etc.). They may contain up to six pages of content including figures, tables, 
> and any appendices, optionally followed by a unlimited additional pages for 
> references and acknowledgments only.
> Accepted short papers will be presented during the workshop, and will be 
> published in the ACM Digital Library.
> 
> Paper Novelty
> 
> An accepted talk that is not published can be based on previously published 
> work, or can describe work currently under submission to another venue.
> 
> An accepted paper that is published must not be based on previously published 
> work, and cannot describe work that is currently under submission to another 
> venue. An accepted paper that is published also must not plagiarize the work 
> of its authors or of any other authors. The ACM Policy and Procedures on 
> Plagiarism applies to the ANRW, and action will be taken against submitters 
> who have engaged in such practices.
> 
> Papers accompanied by nondisclosure agreement requests will not be considered 
> for review or publication, nor ever be disclosed.
> 
> Formatting
> 
> All submissions must satisfy the following requirements:
> 
> Short papers: up to 6 pages for technical content (including appendices) + 
> unlimited pages for references and acknowledgements.
> Submitted talks: up to 2 pages for technical content + unlimited pages 
> references and acknowledgements. Authors may optionally provide an attachment 
> for reference purposes that will not be reviewed.
> 10-point font for main text; font used in other places (e.g., figures) should 
> be no smaller than 9 point
> Two-column format, with the size of each column being at most 3.33 x 9.25 
> inches and the space between columns being at least 0.33 inches letter page 
> size (8.5 x 11 inches)
> Include names and affiliations of all authors on the title page (no 
> anonymization).
> 
> Submissions that do not comply with these requirements will be rejected 
> without review. It is your responsibility to ensure that your submission 
> satisfies the above requirements. If you are using LaTeX, you can make use of 
> this template for ACM conference proceedings. Unlike the official template, 
> it only includes an example for conference proceedings. Note that you must 
> change from the default 9-point format to 10-point text.
> 
> Reviews
> 
> All submissions will be peer reviewed (single-blind). Reviews will be shared 
> with the authors.
> 
> Authors and TPC members provide conflict-of-interest information. It is 
> important that all authors of a submission are indicated in the submission 
> system and that all authors enter any conflicts of interest. Broadly, a 
> conflict of interest exists when:
> 
> You are currently employed at the same organization, have been previously 
> employed at the same organization within the last twelve months, or are going 
> to begin employment at the same organization.
> You have a past or present professional relationship, such as thesis 
> advisement, collaboration on a project, publication, or grant proposal within 
> the past two years.
> 
> These are examples – use your own good judgment.
> 
> Important Dates
> 
> Paper submission deadline:  May 10, 2019
> Paper notification deadline:  June 7, 2019
> Camera-ready paper deadline:  June 21, 2019
> 
> Program Committee
> Phillipa Gill (Chair), UMass Amherst
> Jana Iyengar (Chair), Fastly
> Mark Allman, ICSI
> Grenville Armitage, Netflix
> Theophilus Benson, Brown University
> Zachary Bischof, Internet Initiative Japan
> Lars Eggert, NetApp
> Simone Ferlin, Ericsson
> Romain Fontugne, Internet Initiative Japan
> Daniel Kahn Gillmor, ACLU
> Gonca Gürsun, Özyegin University
> Mirja Kühlewind, Ericsson
> Allison Mankin, Salesforce
> David Oran 
> Jennifer Rexford, Princeton University
> Michael Shapira, Hebrew University of Jerusalem
> Nick Sullivan, Cloudflare
> Thyla van der Merwe, Mozilla
> Chris Wood, Apple
> Noa Zilberman, University of Cambridge
> Supporters and Sponsors
> 
> The ANRW ’19 receives financial support from Comcast and Akamai. The ANRW 
> Workshop series is sponsored by ACM SIGCOMM and the IRTF.

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