Dear colleagues,

We have extended the deadline for ANRW'24 by one week due to popular demand.

The new deadline is: Apr 22, 2024, 11:59 PM AoE.

Note that the travel grants application (May 10, 2024) and notification (May 
24, 2024) deadline are now also available.

See the CFP for more details<https://www.irtf.org/anrw/2024/cfp.html> and/or 
emails us if or have questions.

Best,

Jayasree, Simone, and Ignacio




++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

Call for Papers


The ACM<https://www.acm.org/>/IRTF Applied Networking Research Workshop 2024 
(ANRW'24), co-located with IETF-120<https://www.ietf.org/how/meetings/120/>, is 
the ninth edition of 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 combines presentations of new research in the form of short papers 
and lightning papers. ANRW'24 accepts the following types of submissions:

  *   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. 
Position papers are also welcome. There is a 6-page limit for short papers, 
including figures, tables, and any appendices, optionally followed by unlimited 
additional pages for references.
  *   Lightning papers can provide a summary of early, emerging, or on-going 
work as well as short updates of previously published work. Position papers are 
also welcome. This type of submission will be presented in a short, 
lightning-talk style. For a lightning paper to be considered for presentation, 
please submit an extended abstract that is no longer than 2 pages, with a 
maximum of one additional page for references only.

Paper topics are not restricted to current standardization activities of 
related IETF working groups or activity in related IRTF research groups. We 
welcome papers on topics the IETF/IRTF should be looking at.

We note that the structure and use of the Internet, and Internet services, are 
constantly evolving. The list is long, including but not limited to shifts in 
traffic patterns and demands with remote work over broadband access networks, 
operational responses to large-scale physical and socio-political events, also 
trends towards increased multiplexing of connections over fewer IP addresses 
for various reasons that include scale, adaptability, and privacy.

  *   Development and deployment experience of new or enhanced Internet 
protocols (e.g., for transport, security, or routing).
  *   Improvements, measurements, and analysis of the security and privacy of 
new and existing Internet protocols and privacy enhancing technologies.
  *   Evolution of interconnection, and new approaches on network management, 
operations, and control.
  *   Practical congestion control for heterogeneous networks and novel 
applications.
  *   Better ways of specifying protocols, including usable techniques for 
protocol verification.
  *   Interactions between CDNs, anycast, and edge services such as DNS and 
Firewalls.
  *   Research and analysis of consolidation and centralization of the Internet.
  *   Techniques for logging/monitoring of Internet traffic and root-cause 
analysis, as well as debugging of (encrypted) Internet protocols.
  *   Measurement and analysis of the performance of networks, including the 
performance or quality of experience of networked applications.
  *   Design, measurement, analysis, or deployment of wireless, mobile, and 
cellular networks.
  *   Internet resilience and recovery in physically challenging environments 
and events (e.g., remote areas, natural disaster situations).
  *   Approaches and efforts towards decentralizing and democratizing the 
Internet.
  *   Understanding the impact and interoperability of diverse clients (e.g., 
IoT, robotics, manufacturing).
  *   The changing semantics of IP addresses and connection-level metadata at 
large-scale (e.g. Addressing Agility, Private Relay).
  *   Formal verification of protocols.
  *   Topics relevant to the standardization activities of related IETF working 
groups.
  *   Topics relevant to activity in related IRTF research groups.

ANRW'24 is co-located with IETF-120<https://www.ietf.org/how/meetings/120/> in 
Vancouver, and takes place in the week of July 20-26, 2024. This gives IETF as 
well as workshop attendees the opportunity to exchange ideas on topics and open 
problems discussed at the workshop and the IETF.

ANRW'24 will be a hybrid event. Remote participation options will be available; 
please contact the chairs if you intend to submit work but know in advance that 
you will not be able to present the work in-person at the workshop.

ANRW'24 particularly encourages the submission of results that could form the 
basis for future engineering work in the IETF, by, for example providing input 
and analysis on Internet protocols or operational Internet practices, as well 
as influence further research and experimentation in the IRTF.



Formatting

All submissions must satisfy the following requirements:

  *   Short papers: up to 6 pages for technical content (including appendices) 
+ unlimited pages for references
  *   Lightning papers: up to 2 pages for an extended abstract (including 
appendices) + a maximum of one page for references.
  *   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).
  *   We strongly encourage the use of the new ACM LaTeX template, which 
satisfies these style requirements provided you specify a 10-point font size. 
The following settings should produce this output: 
\documentclass[10pt,sigconf,letterpaper]{acmart}

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.


Paper Novelty

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.


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 judgement.


ACM<https://www.acm.org/> Policies

By submitting your article to an ACM<https://www.acm.org/> Publication, you are 
hereby acknowledging that you and your co-authors are subject to all  ACM 
Publications Policies, <https://www.acm.org/publications/policies> including 
ACM<https://www.acm.org/>'s new  Publications Policy on Research Involving 
Human Participants and Subjects. 
<https://www.acm.org/publications/policies/research-involving-human-participants-and-subjects>
 Alleged violations of this policy or any ACM<https://www.acm.org/> 
Publications Policy will be investigated by ACM<https://www.acm.org/> and may 
result in a full retraction of your paper, in addition to other potential 
penalties, as per ACM<https://www.acm.org/> Publications Policy.

Please ensure that you and your co-authors  obtain an ORCID ID, 
<https://orcid.org/register> so you can complete the publishing process for 
your accepted paper. ACM<https://www.acm.org/> has been involved in ORCID from 
the start and we have recently made a  commitment to collect ORCID IDs 
<https://authors.acm.org/author-resources/orcid-faqs> from all of our published 
authors.  The collection process has started and will roll out as a requirement 
throughout 2022.  We are committed to improve author discoverability, ensure 
proper attribution and contribute to ongoing community efforts around name 
normalization; your ORCID ID will help in these efforts.


Important Dates

Paper submission deadline:             22 April 2024 (11:59pm AoE)

Paper notification deadline:             5 June 2024

Camera-ready paper deadline:        15 June 2024

Registration opens:                            (TBC) 2024

Travel grants application deadline: May 10 2024

Travel grants notification deadline: May 24 2024

ANRW '24 workshop:                         (TBC) July 2024


Submission site

anrw2024.hotcrp.com<https://anrw2024.hotcrp.com/>







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