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ACM CCS 2016 : 23rd ACM Conference on Computer and Communications Security | |||||||||||||||
Link: https://www.sigsac.org/ccs/CCS2016/ | |||||||||||||||
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Call For Papers | |||||||||||||||
ACM CCS 2016 Call for Papers
23rd ACM Conference on Computer and Communication Security October 24 – 28, 2016, Hofburg Palace, Vienna, Austria Paper Submission Information The conference seeks submissions from academia, government, and industry presenting novel research results in all practical and theoretical aspects of computer and communications security. Papers should be related to the construction, evaluation, application, or operation of secure systems. Theoretical papers must make a convincing argument for the relevance of the results to secure systems. All topic areas related to computer and communications security are of interest and in scope. Accepted papers will be published by ACM Press in the conference proceedings. Paper Submission Process Submissions must be made by the deadline of Monday, May 23, 2016 23:59 UTC-11. The review process will be carried out in two phases and authors will have an opportunity to comment on the first-phase reviews. Submitted papers must not substantially overlap papers that have been published or that are simultaneously submitted to a journal, conference or workshop. Simultaneous submission of the same work is not allowed. Note that submitted papers cannot be withdrawn from the process after the first phase reviews are received by authors. Authors of accepted papers must guarantee that their papers will be presented at the conference. Paper Format Submissions must be at most 12 pages in double-column ACM format (http://www.acm.org/sigs/publications/ proceedings-templates) including the bibliography and well-marked appendices. Submissions must be anonymized and avoid obvious self-references. Only PDF files will be accepted. Submissions not meeting these guidelines risk rejection without consideration of their merits. Conflicts of Interest The program co-chairs require cooperation from both authors and program committee members to prevent submissions from being evaluated by reviewers who have a conflict of interest. During the submission process, we will ask authors to identify members of the program committee with whom they have a conflict of interest. This includes anyone with close personal or professional relationship to any of the authors, such as close family members, people from the same department/group, and recent collaborators (e.g. collaborated on a joint paper in the last two years). It also includes anyone in a position of substantial influence on (or by) the authors, such as advisor or advisee (at any time in the past), line-of-management relationship, grant program manager, etc. In rare cases, we will allow conflict-of-interest designation due to personal or professional animosity. In such cases, we require that in addition to marking the conflict during submission, the authors contact the program co-chairs by email and explain the reason for this conflict. Program committee members who have a conflict of interest with a paper, including program co-chairs, will be excluded from evaluation and discussion of the paper. In the case of a program co-chair, the other co-chairs who do not have conflicts will be responsible for managing that paper. Paper Submission Due: May 23, 2016 23:59 UTC-11 [Tuesday, May 24 2016, 10:59 UTC] First round reviews sent to authors: July 5, 2016 Author comments due on: July 8, 2016 23:59 UTC-11 Acceptance Notification: July 22, 2016 Camera Ready Papers Due: August 16, 2016 Program Chairs: Christopher Kruegel, University of California, Santa Barbara, USA Andrew Myers, Cornell University, USA Shai Halevi, IBM Research, USA Program Committee: Shweta Agrawal, Indian Institute of Technology, India Gail-Joon Ahn, Arizona State University, USA Martin Albrecht, Royal Holloway, University of London, UK Manos Antonakakis, Georgia Institute of Technology, US Frederik Armknecht, University of Mannheim, Germany Erman Ayday, Bilkent University, Turkey Michael Backes, CISPA, Saarland University & MPI-SWS, Germany Davide Balzarotti, Eurecom, Austria Karthikeyan Bhargavan, INRIA, France Alex Biryukov, University of Luxembourg, Luxembourg Marina Blanton, University of Notre Dame, France Alexandra Boldyreva, Georgia Institute of Technology, USA Herbert Bos, Vrije Universiteit / VU University Amsterdam, Netherlands Kevin Butler, University of Florida, USA Juan Caballero, IMDEA Software Institute, Spain Yinzhi Cao, Lehigh University, USA Srdjan Capkun, ETH Zurich, Switzerland David Cash, Rutgers University, USA Lorenzo Cavallaro, Royal Holloway, University of London, UK Yan Chen, Northwestern University, USA Alessandro Chiesa, UC Berkeley, USA Yung Ryn (Elisha) Choe, Sandia National Laboratories, USA Omar Chowdhury, Purdue University, USA Véronique Cortier, CNRS, France Dana Dachman-Soled, University of Maryland, USA George Danezis, University College London, UK Anupam Datta, Carnegie Mellon University, USA Alexander De Luca, Google, USA Rinku Dewri, University of Denver, USA Adam Doupé, Arizona State University, USA Tudor Dumitras, University of Maryland, USA Stefan Dziembowski, University of Warsaw, Poland Manuel Egele, Boston University, USA William Enck, North Carolina State University, USA Dario Fiore, IMDEA Software Institute, Spain Michael Franz, University of California, USA Matt Fredrikson, Carnegie Mellon, USA Xinwen Fu, University of Massachusetts Lowell, USA Vinod Ganapathy, Rutgers University, USA Juan Garay, Yahoo Labs, USA Deepak Garg, Max Planck Institute for Software Systems, Germany Cristiano Giuffrida, VU University Amsterdam, Netherlands Ian Goldberg, University of Waterloo, Canada Zhongshu Gu, IBM T.J. Watson Research Center, USA Amir Herzberg, Bar Ilan University, Israel Viet Tung Hoang, University of California, USA Thorsten Holz, Ruhr-University Bochum, Germany Amir Houmansadr, University of Massachusetts Amherst, USA Yan Huang, Indiana University, USA Tibor Jager, Ruhr-University Bochum, Germany Abhishek Jain, Johns Hopkins University, USA Limin Jia, Carnegie Mellon University, USA Hongxia Jin, Samsung Research America, USA Brent Byunghoon Kang, KAIST, South Korea Chris Kanich, University of Illinois at Chicago, USA Stefan Katzenbeisser, TU Darmstadt, Germany Florian Kerschbaum, SAP, Germany Dmitry Khovratovich, University of Luxembourg, Luxembourg Taesoo Kim, Georgia Tech, USA Engin Kirda, Northeastern University, USA Markulf Kohlweiss, Microsoft Research, UK Vladimir Kolesnikov, Bell Labs, USA Ralf Kuesters, University of Trier, Germany Ranjit Kumaresan, MIT, USA Andrea Lanzi, University of Milan, Italy Peeter Laud, Cybernetica AS, Estonia Wenke Lee, Georgia Institute of Technology, USA Anja Lehmann, IBM Research – Zurich, Switzerland Zhou Li, RSA Labs, UK Zhenkai Liang, National University of Singapore, Singapore Benoît Libert, ENS de Lyon, France Zhiqiang Lin, University of Texas at Dallas, USA Yao Liu, University of South Florida, USA Ben Livshits, Microsoft Research, USA Long Lu, Stony Brook University, USA Matteo Maffei, CISPA, Saarland University, Germany Tal Malkin, Columbia University, USA Mohammad Mannan, Concordia University, Canada Sarah Meiklejohn, University College London, UK Prateek Mittal, Princeton University, USA Ian Molloy, IBM Research, USA Steven Murdoch, University College London, UK Arvind Narayanan, Princeton University, USA Nick Nikiforakis, Stony Brook University, USA Hamed Okhravi, MIT Lincoln Laboratory, USA Claudio Orlandi, Aarhus University, Denmark Xinming Ou, University of South Florida, USA Charalampos Papamanthou, University of Maryland, USA Bryan Parno, Microsoft Research, USA Mathias Payer, Purdue University, USA Roberto Perdisci, University of Georgia, USA Adrian Perrig, ETH Zurich, Switzerland Marco Pistoia, IBM T. J. Watson Research Center, USA Michalis Polychronakis, Stony Brook University, USA Raluca Ada Popa, UC Berkeley, USA Christina Pöpper, New York University Abu Dhabi, UAE Emmanuel Prouff, ANSSI, France Zhiyun Qian, University of California, USA Kui Ren, State University of New York at Buffalo, USA Konrad Rieck, Technische Universität Braunschweig, Germany William Robertson, Northeastern University, USA Alejandro Russo, Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden Andrei Sabelfeld, Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden Ahmad-Reza Sadeghi, Technische Universität Darmstadt, Germany Nitesh Saxena, University of Alabama at Birmingham, USA Jörg Schwenk, Ruhr University Bochum, Germany Abhi Shelat, University of Virginia, USA Elaine Shi, Cornell, USA Tom Shrimpton, University of Florida, USA Kapil Singh, IBM Research, USA Sooel Son, Google, USA Douglas Stebila, McMaster University, Canada Gianluca Stringhini, University College London, UK Thorsten Strufe, TU Dresden, Germany Ed Suh, Cornell University, USA Kun Sun, College of William and Mary, USA Jakub Szefer, Yale University, USA Gang Tan, Pennsylvania State University, USA Stefano Tessaro, University of California, USA Mohit Tiwari, UT Austin, USA Nikos Triandopoulos, Boston University, USA Mahesh Tripunitara, University of Waterloo, Canada XiaoFeng Wang, Indiana University, USA Zhi Wang, Florida State University, USA Hoeteck Wee, ENS, France Edgar Weippl, SBA Research, Austria Wenyuan Xu, University of South Carolina & Zhejiang University, USA/China Dongyan Xu, Purdue University, USA Danfeng, Daphne, Yao, Virginia Tech, USA Ting Yu, Qatar Computing Research Institute, Qatar David Zage, Intel corporation, USA Yanchao Zhang, Arizona State University, USA Kehuan Zhang, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong Yinqian Zhang, The Ohio State University, USA Xiangyu Zhang, Purdue University, USA Sheng Zhong, Nanjing University, China Haojin Zhu, Shanghai Jiao Tong University, China |
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