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IWCC 2012 : First International Workshop on Cyber Crime | |||||||||||||||
Link: http://stegano.net/iwcc/ | |||||||||||||||
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Call For Papers | |||||||||||||||
First International Workshop on Cyber Crime - IWCC 2012
October 3-5, 2012 St. Petersburg, Russia co-located with International Congress on Ultra Modern Telecommunications and Control Systems (ICUMT 2012) IWCC website: http://stegano.net/iwcc Call for papers The proposed workshop is intended to be a follow-up of: - International Workshop on Network Steganography (IWNS) (held in 2009, 2010 and 2011) - International Workshop on Digital Forensics (IWDF) (held in 2011) Today's world's societies are becoming more and more dependent on open networks such as the Internet - where commercial activities, business transactions and government services are realized. This has led to the fast development of new cyber threats and numerous information security issues which are exploited by cyber criminals. The inability to provide trusted secure services in contemporary computer network technologies has a tremendous socio-economic impact on global enterprises as well as individuals. Moreover, the frequently occurring international frauds impose the necessity to conduct the investigation of facts spanning across multiple international borders. Such examination is often subject to different jurisdictions and legal systems. A good illustration of the above being the Internet, which has made it easier to perpetrate traditional crimes. It has acted as an alternate avenue for the criminals to conduct their activities, and launch attacks with relative anonymity. The increased complexity of the communications and the networking infrastructure is making investigation of the crimes difficult. Traces of illegal digital activities are often buried in large volumes of data, which are hard to inspect with the aim of detecting offences and collecting evidence. Nowadays, the digital crime scene functions like any other network, with dedicated administrators functioning as the first responders. This poses new challenges for law enforcement policies and forces the computer societies to utilize digital forensics to combat the increasing number of cybercrimes. Forensic professionals must be fully prepared in order to be able to provide court admissible evidence. To make these goals achievable, forensic techniques should keep pace with new technologies. The aim of this workshop is to bring together the research accomplishments provided by the researchers from academia and the industry. The other goal is to show the latest research results in the field of digital forensics and to present the development of tools and techniques which assist the investigation process of potentially illegal cyber activity. We encourage prospective authors to submit related distinguished research papers on the subject of both: theoretical approaches and practical case reviews. The workshop is an interesting supplement for ICUMT 2012 in area of security of communication networks. It is especially important because year 2011 has been named by mass media "the year of the hack" due to numerous accounts of data security breaches in private companies and governments. The amount of stolen data is estimated in petabytes. Large amount of the damage can be attributed to Operation Shady RAT or Duqu worm which is a successor of famous Stuxnet malware. This year's workshop's main theme is network forensics. Topics of interests include, but are not limited to: - Cyber crimes: design and detection - Cyber crime related investigations - Digital forensics tools and applications - Digital forensics case studies and best practices - Formal standards, procedures and methods in digital forensics - Privacy issues in digital forensics - Steganography/steganalysis and covert/subliminal channels - Network anomalies detection - Novel applications of information hiding in networks - Information hiding for multimedia services - New methods for detecting and eliminating network steganography - Localization of digital forensic techniques - Computer and network forensics - Network traffic analysis, traceback and attribution - Incident response, investigation and evidence handling - Integrity of digital evidence and live investigations - Identification, authentication and collection of digital evidence - Anti-forensic techniques and methods - Watermarking and intellectual property theft - Analysis techniques for digital forensics and information assurance research - Social networking forensics - Political and business issues related to digital forensics and anti-forensic techniques and methods Chairs Krzysztof Szczypiorski, Warsaw University of Technology, Poland (e-mail: ksz{at}tele.pw.edu.pl) Józef Lubacz, Warsaw University of Technology, Poland (e-mail: jl{at}tele.pw.edu.pl) Wojciech Mazurczyk, Warsaw University of Technology, Poland (e-mail: wmazurczyk{at}tele.pw.edu.pl) List of Program Committee members (tentative): Costas Constantinou, University of Birmingham, UK Nicolas T. Courtois, University College London, UK Jana Dittmann, Otto-von-Guericke University of Magdeburg, Germany Michael Fisk, University of California San Diego, USA Zeno Geradts, Digital Evidence R&D Netherlands Forensic Institute, The Hague, Netherlands Pavel Gladyshev, University College Dublin, Ireland Stefan Katzenbeisser, Technische Universität Darmstadt, Germany Jerzy Konorski, Gdansk University of Technology, Poland Igor Kotenko, Russian Academy of Sciences, Russia Zbigniew Kotulski, Warsaw University of Technology and IPPT PAN, Poland Christian Kraetzer, Otto-von-Guericke University of Magdeburg, Germany Deepa Kundur, Texas A&M University, USA Miroslaw Kutylowski, Wroclaw Universtity of Technology, Poland Ke Liao, Institute of Electronics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, China Guangjie Liu, Nanjing University of Science and Technology, China Josef Pieprzyk, Macquarie University, Australia Marcus K. Rogers, Purdue University, USA Vassil Roussev, University of New Orleans, USA Pedro Luis Prospero Sanchez, University of Sao Paulo, Sao Paulo, Brazil Janusz Stoklosa, Poznan University of Technology, Poland Hui Tian, National Huaqiao University, China Jinwei Wang, The 28th Research Institute of CETC, China Jozef Wozniak, Gdansk University of Technology, Poland Sebastian Zander, Swinburne University of Technology Melbourne, Australia Papers will be accepted based on peer review (3 per paper) and should contain original, high quality work. All papers must be written in English. Page length is limited to 8-pages in the IEEE double-column format with a font size no smaller than 10 points using IEEE Conference Proceeding templates (same as ICUMT 2012 template). Submission page: TBA The extended versions of high-quality papers selected from the workshop will be published in a special issue of: Security and Communicationn Networks or The Computer Journal (tenative). Dates Manuscript Due: 31.05.2012 Acceptance Notification: 15.07.2012 Final Manuscript Due: 30.07.2012 |
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