Call for Papers
1st International Workshop on Election Infrastructure Security (EIS 2022)
September 30, 2022

Website: https://csis.gmu.edu/EIS-2022/

In conjunction with the 27th European Symposium on Research in Computer 
Security (ESORICS 2022)
September 26-30, 2022, Copenhagen, Denmark

Fair and secure elections are the bedrock of democracy. In today’s world, 
voting and elections rely on a complex infrastructure comprising voter 
registration databases, several types of electronic devices (voting machines, 
optical scanners, etc.), protocols to securely transmit data from polling 
places to central processing facilities, various software applications to 
count, tabulate and analyze votes, and physical facilities to securely store 
ballots and voting equipment. People’s confidence in the result of elections is 
heavily dependent on a nation’s ability to secure such complex infrastructure 
and guarantee the integrity and confidentiality of the vote.

The Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Administration (CISA), a United 
States agency charged with securing the nation’s cyber and physical 
infrastructure, classifies election infrastructure as “critical 
infrastructure”. In fact, election infrastructure and processes are subject to 
attack by malicious actors just like any other critical infrastructure (e.g., 
energy systems, transportation systems, and financial systems). Recent events 
have shown how attacks against voting systems and election infrastructure, 
disinformation and misinformation campaigns, and claims of election fraud, 
whether founded or not, can affect people’s confidence in the integrity of the 
system and alienate voters. As threats evolve and become more sophisticated, 
the research community is called to find novel approaches and techniques to 
ensure the security of voting systems and election infrastructure and the 
confidentiality and integrity of the vote.

This workshop aims at providing researchers and practitioners in different 
areas of security (network security, cryptography, etc.), networking, hardware 
architectures, software engineering, system engineering, machine learning, and 
natural language processing with an interdisciplinary forum to present, 
discuss, and exchange ideas that address the challenges of current and 
next-generation Election Infrastructure systems. The workshop seeks submissions 
from academia, government, and industry presenting novel research results in 
all practical and theoretical aspects of Election Infrastructure Security.

Topics of interest include, but are not limited to:

  *   Voter registration databases
  *   Voting machines
  *   Vote counting machines
  *   Electronic poll books
  *   Physical security of voting equipment
  *   Access control
  *   Security standards
  *   Disinformation & misinformation campaigns

Important Dates

Paper submission due: June 30, 2022

Notification to authors: July 30, 2022

Camera ready due: August 10, 2022

Program Committee Chairs

  *   Massimiliano Albanese, George Mason University, USA
  *   Jack Davidson, University of Virginia, USA

Steering Committee

  *   Massimiliano Albanese, George Mason University, USA
  *   Josh Benaloh, Microsoft Research, USA
  *   Jack Davidson, University of Virginia, USA
  *   Karen Hoyt-Stewart, Virginia Department of Elections, USA
  *   Chris Krebs, Krebs Stamos Group

Proceedings Chair

  *   Vincenzo Moscato, University of Naples, Italy

Publicity Chair

  *   Giancarlo Sperlì, University of Naples, Italy

Technical Program Committee

  *   Josh Benaloh, Microsoft Research, USA
  *   Matt Bernhard, VotingWorks, USA
  *   Aleks Essex, Western University, Canada
  *   Oksana Kulyk, IT University of Copenhagen, Denmark
  *   Daniel P. Lopresti, Lehigh University, USA
  *   Peter Ryan, University of Luxemburg, Luxemburg
  *   Carsten SchĂĽrmann, IT University of Copenhagen, Denmark
  *   Philip B. Stark, University of California, Berkeley, USA
  *   Vanessa Teague, Australian National University, USA
  *   Melanie Volkamer, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, Germany

Submission

Submitted papers must not substantially overlap with papers that have been 
published or simultaneously submitted to a journal or a conference with 
proceedings. Contributions are not required to be anonymized, and are to be 
made to the submission web site at 
http://www.easychair.org<https://easychair.org/my/conference?conf=eis2022>. 
Only PDF files will be accepted.

The workshop proceedings will be published by Springer in the Lecture Notes in 
Computer Science (LNCS) series. Submissions must be prepared in LaTeX 
(recommended) or Microsoft Word using the LNCS 
template<https://www.springer.com/gp/computer-science/lncs/conference-proceedings-guidelines>.
 Full papers must be between 12 and 16 pages in length, and and short papers 
must be between 6 and 11 pages. Authors are encouraged to include their 
ORCIDs<http://www.orcid.org/>.

Submissions not meeting these guidelines risk rejection without consideration 
of their merits. Papers must be received by the deadline of June 30, 2022 to be 
considered. Notification of acceptance or rejection will be sent to authors by 
July 30, 2022. Camera ready papers must be submitted by August 10, 2022. 
Authors of accepted papers must guarantee that one of the authors will register 
and present the paper at the workshop.

Massimiliano Albanese, PhD
Associate Professor, Department of Information Sciences and Technology
Associate Director, Center for Secure Information Systems
Research Hall, Suite 417
George Mason University
Fairfax, VA 22030, USA
Phone: (703) 993-1629
Fax: (703) 993-4776
Email: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
Web: http://csis.gmu.edu/albanese/
LinkedIn: http://www.linkedin.com/in/massimilianoalbanese

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