Internet Measurement Conference 2012
Sponsored by ACM SIGCOMM and ACM SIGMETRICS and in cooperation with USENIX
November 14-16 2012, Boston Massachusetts USA

The Internet Measurement Conference is a highly selective venue for publishing 
and discussing measurement-based Internet research. IMC 
2012<http://www-net.cs.umass.edu/imc2012/index.htm> invites submissions that 
expand our understanding of how the Internet ecosystem behaves.

IMC takes a broad view of what constitutes the Internet ecosystem. This view 
includes (but is not limited to):

  *   the Internet backbone and edge networks (e.g., home networks, cellular 
networks, WLANs)
  *   data centers and cloud computing infrastructure
  *   peer-to-peer and content distribution networks
  *   infrastructure for online social networks
  *   applications that use these networks (e.g., Web, gaming, multimedia 
streaming, VoIP, MapReduce)

Types of contributions that the program committee would enjoy receiving 
submissions regarding include (but are not limited to):

  *   collection and analysis of data that yield new insights about network 
structure and behavior (e.g., traffic, topology, routing, privacy, security, 
energy use, economics)
  *   methods and tools to monitor and visualize network-based phenomena
  *   systems and algorithmic techniques that leverage measurement-based 
findings in novel ways
  *   advances in data collection and handling (e.g., anonymization, querying, 
storage, facilitating sharing)
  *   modeling of network structure and behavior (e.g., workload)
  *   reappraisal of previous empirical findings

Papers that do not relate to measuring aspects of the Internet ecosystem are 
out of scope. Authors should contact the program chairs ([email protected]) if 
they are unsure whether their work is in scope.

Review process and criteria

  *   IMC 2012 invites two forms of submissions
     *   Full papers (up to 14 pages) that describe original research, with 
succinctness appropriate to the topics and themes they discuss.
     *   Short papers (up to 6 pages for text and figures + up to 1 page for 
references) that convey work that is less mature but shows promise, articulate 
a high-level vision, describe challenging future directions, critique current 
measurement wisdom, or offer results that do not merit a full submission.

All submissions that are longer than what is allowed for a short paper will be 
evaluated as full papers.

Authors should only submit original work that has not been published before and 
is not under submission to any other venue. We will consider full paper 
submissions that extend previously published short, preliminary papers 
(including IMC short papers) following the model of the ACM SIGCOMM policy 
(http://www.sigcomm.org/about/policies/frequently-asked-questions-faq).

  *   Ethical standards for measurement must be considered by all authors. In 
particular, authors must conform to acceptable use policies for domains that 
are probed or monitored, data privacy and anonymity for all personally 
identifiable information (PII) and etiquette for using shared measurement data. 
(See Allman and Paxson, IMC 
'07<http://conferences.sigcomm.org/imc/2007/papers/imc80.pdf>.) If applicable, 
authors are also urged to notify parties of security flaws in their products or 
services in advance of publication. Adherence to ethical standards for 
measurement will be a criterion for all submissions, and any 
violations---including ambiguous situations not well described---will be 
grounds for rejection

  *   IMC 2012 will continue the "review summary" exercise from IMC 2011. 
Published versions of the papers will be accompanied by 1) almost-verbatim but 
anonymized reviews written by the reviewers, and 2) a short response by the 
authors to the reviews. For reference, see the IMC 2011 program, where review 
summaries appear towards the end of each paper. The main goal of this exercise 
is to make review process more transparent by making public the PC's rationale 
for accepting the paper, the main concerns of the reviewers, and the authors' 
response to those concerns.

All accepted papers (both long and short) will be included in this process. 
This exercise does not have any bearing on the accept/reject decision on the 
paper, and it does not impact papers that are not accepted for publication.

  *   IMC 2012 will bestow two awards (unlike previous years). One award will 
recognize the outstanding paper at the conference, and all accepted papers are 
eligible for it. The other award will recognize a paper that contributes a 
novel dataset to the community. To be eligible for this award, the authors must 
make their dataset publicly available (e.g., through 
CRAWDAD<http://crawdad.cs.dartmouth.edu/> for wireless data) by the time of 
camera ready submission.

A few accepted papers may be forwarded for fast-track submission to IEEE/ACM 
Transactions on 
Networking<http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/xpl/RecentIssue.jsp?punumber=90>.

Submission guidelines

All submissions must satisfy the following requirements:

  *   up to 14 pages for full papers, or up to 6 pages (+1 for references) for 
short papers
  *   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 9.25 x 3.33 
inches and the space between columns being at least 0.33 inches
  *   letter page size (11 x 8.5 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. The sig-alternate-10pt.cls 
style<http://conferences.sigcomm.org/sigcomm/2010/sig-alternate-10pt.cls> file 
satisfies the formatting requirements. Compile your source with options that 
produce letter page size.

Submission site: http://imc12.ucsd.edu/

Important dates

Paper registration (with abstract):       May 4th, 2012 (11:59:59 EDT)
Paper submission:                              May 11th, 2012 (11:59:59 EDT)
Notification:                                         July 27th, 2012
Camera-ready due:                            Sep 17th, 2012
Conference:                                        Nov 14-16, 2012 (in Boston)
-------------
General Co-Chairs

John Byers, Boston University
Jim Kurose, University of Massachusetts Amherst
Technical Program Co-Chairs

Ratul Mahajan, Microsoft Research
Alex Snoeren, UC San Diego
Technical Program Committee:
Aditya Akella,UW-Madison
Aruna Balasubramanian, University of Washington
Meeyoung Cha, KAIST
Kameswari Chebrolu, IIT Bombay
Kenjiro Cho, IIJ
Chen-nee Chuah, UC Davis
kc Claffy, CAIDA / UC San Diego
Mark Crovella, Boston University
Xenofontas Dimitropoulos, ETH Zurich
Nandita Dukkipati, Google
Nick Feamster, Georgia Tech
Sharon Goldberg, Boston University
Matthias Grossglauser, EPFL
Krishna Gummadi, MPI-SWS
Ramana Kompella, Purdue University
Christian Kreibich, ICSI
Harsha Madhyasta, UC Riverside
Ratul Mahajan (Chair), Microsoft Research
Alan Mislove, Northeastern University
Vivek Pai, Princeton University
Dina Papagiannaki, Telefonica
Vern Paxson, UC Berkeley
Costin Raiciu , University Politehnica of Bucharest
Vyas Sekar, Intel
Alex Snoeren (Chair), UC San Diego
Peter Steenkiste, CMU
Nina Taft, Technicolor
Xiaowei Yang, Duke University
Jennifer Yates, AT&T Research
Ming Zhang, Microsoft Research
Zhi-Li Zhang, University of Minnesota
Ben Zhao, UC Santa Barbara
IMC Steering Committee

Mark Allman, ICSI
Paul Barford , University of Wisconsin
Chen-Nee Chuah, UC Davis
Renata Teixeira, CNRS and Université Pierre & Marie Curie
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