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Last Modified:5/5/08
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Contents
ACM Transactions on Reconfigurable Technology and Systems,
Special Issue on Security in Reconfigurable Systems Design,
2009.
(Submission Due 23 May 2008) [posted here 5/5/08]
Guest editors: Patrick Schaumont (Virginia Tech, USA),
Alex K. Jones (University of Pittsburgh, USA), and
Steve Trimberger (Xilinx, USA)
The secure operation of computer systems and networks continues to be an
important research topic for a variety of applications and infrastructures.
Increasingly, these security concerns are extending from the
software information-processing domain into the hardware domain and in particular into the reconfigurable
computing research community. From a design perspective, security forms a separate dimension in design
alongside of constraints on area, performance, and power. By carefully considering security issues in the
design of reconfigurable hardware, security can become a basic property of the system implementation rather
than being addressed as an afterthought.
This special issue of ACM Transactions on Reconfigurable Technology and Systems solicits papers in the
areas of secure design technologies and architectures for reconfigurable devices and novel applications for
reconfigurable platforms. Topics of interest include but are not limited to the following areas:
Design Technologies and Architectures:
- Protection of hardware design intellectual property (e.g. FPGA bitstream).
- Side-channel resistant and fault-resistant design mechanisms.
- The use of Physically Unclonable Functions for authentication and anti-counterfeiting.
- Architectural techniques to mitigate the tradeoffs between power, performance, and area with system security.
- Methods for creating device-unique identifiers from device fabrication properties.
- Architectures that improve component isolation and resistance to physical attacks.
- Secure and formally verifiable/equivalent design automation techniques for reconfigurable hardware.
Novel Applications:
- Improving the performance or power consumption of software implementations of security
algorithms using reconfigurable hardware.
- Acceleration to increase feasibility of brute force attacks on cryptographic algorithms.
- Use of physical partitioning of subsystems to improve secure system design.
- Use of reconfigurable architecture features for resistance to physical attacks.
- Prototyping of novel trusted computing primitives.
For more information, please see
http://trets.cse.sc.edu/TRETS-Security-SI.pdf.
Wiley's Security and Communication Networks Journal,
Special Issue on Security in Mobile Wireless Networks,
4th quarter of 2009.
(Submission Due 30 September 2008) [posted here 4/28/08]
Guest editors: Abderrahim Benslimane (University of Avignon, France)
Chadi Assi (Concordia University, Montreal, Canada),
Stamatios V. Kartalopoulos (University of Oklahoma, USA),
and Fred Nen-Fu Huang (National Tsing Hua University, Taiwan)
Security has become a primary concern in order to provide protected
communication in mobile networks. Unlike the wired networks, the unique
characteristics of mobile networks pose a number of nontrivial
challenges to security design, such as open peer-to-peer network
architecture, shared wireless medium, stringent resource constraints,
highly dynamic network topology and absence of a trusted infrastructure.
Ubiquitous roaming impacts on a radio access system by requiring that it
supports handover between neighbouring cells and different networks.
Also, mobile networks are more exposed to interferences than wired
networks. There are several components that contribute to this: adjacent
channels, co-channels, Doppler shifts, multipath, and fading.
This SI aims to identify and explore the different issues and challenges
related to security aspects in mobile networks. What are the impacts
(benefits or inconvenience) of mobility on security? What are the
appropriate mobility models to have a good level of security? Are
Classical IDS approaches appropriate for mobile environments? How can be
managed security when Mobility pattern and/or behaviour prediction?
The complete security solution should span both layers, and encompass
all three security components of prevention, detection, and reaction.
Topics of interest include, but are not limited to, the following as
they relate to mobile networks:
- Secure mobile PHY/MAC protocols
- Secure mobile routing protocols
- Security under resource constraints (e.g., energy, bandwidth,
memory, and computation constraints)
- Performance and security tradeoffs in mobile networks
- Secure roaming across administrative domains
- Key management in mobile scenarios
- Cryptographic Protocols
- Authentication and access control in mobile networks
- Intrusion detection and tolerance in mobile network
- Trust establishment, negotiation, and management
- Secure mobile location services
- Secure clock distribution
- Privacy and anonymity
- Denial of service in mobile networks
- Prevention of traffic analysis
For more information, please see
http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/cgi-bin/jtoc/114299116/.
May 2008
FCC 2008
4th Workshop on Formal and Computational Cryptography,
Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, PA, USA, June 26, 2008.
(Submissions due 5 May 2008) [posted here 4/28/08]
Since the 1980s, two approaches have been developed for analyzing security protocols.
One of the approaches is based on a computational model that considers issues of
computational complexity and probability. Messages are modeled as bitstrings and
security properties are defined in a strong form, in essence guaranteeing security
with high probability against all probabilistic polynomial-time attacks. However,
it is difficult to prove security of large, complex protocols in this model. The
other approach relies on a symbolic model of protocol execution in which messages
are modelled using a term algebra and cryptographic primitives are treated as
perfect black-boxes, e.g. the only way to decrypt a ciphertext is to use the
corresponding decryption key. This abstraction enables significantly simpler and
often automated analysis of complex protocols. Since this model places strong
constraints on the attacker, a fundamental question is whether such an analysis
implies the strong security properties defined in the computational model.
This workshop focuses on approaches that combine and relate symbolic and computational
protocol analysis. Over the last few years, there has been a spate of research results
in this area. One set of results establish correspondence theorems between the two models,
in effect showing that for a certain class of protocols and properties, security
in the symbolic model implies security in the computational model. In other work,
researchers use language-based techniques such as process calculi and protocol
logics to reason directly about the computational model. Several projects are
investigating ways of mechanizing computationally sound proofs of protocols. T
he workshop seeks results in this area of computationally sound protocol analysis:
foundations and tools.
For more information, please see
http://www.di.ens.fr/~blanchet/fcc08/.
IWSEC 2008
3rd International Workshop on Security,
Kagawa, Japan, November 25-27, 2008.
(Submissions due 8 May 2008) [posted here 1/17/08]
The aim of IWSEC2008 is to contribute to security research and
development addressing the topics from traditional theory and tools
on security to other up-to-date issues.
Topics include but are not limited to:
- Cryptography
- Authorization and Access Control
- Biometrics
- Information Hiding
- Quantum Security
- Network and Distributed Systems Security
- Privacy Enhancing Technology
- Security Issues in Ubiquitous/Pervasive Computing
- Security Management
- Software and System Security
- Protection of Critical Infrastructure
- Digital Forensics
- Economics and Other Scientific Approaches for Security
For more information, please see
http://www.iwsec.org.
AISec 2008
1st ACM Workshop on AISec,
Held in conjunction with the 15th ACM Conference on Computer and Communication Security (CCS 2008),
Alexandria, VA, USA, October 27, 2008.
(Submissions due 9 May 2008) [posted here 3/3/08]
The ubiquitous nature of information and communication today is often cited as the cause of
many security and privacy problems including identity and reputation management, viruses/worms
and phishing/pharming. There is strong evidence, however, that this abundance of information
and communication has at least as many security and privacy benefits as costs. Consider for
example, the use of machine learning algorithms to detect network intrusions, crowd-based
approaches to anonymous communication and the use of data mining algorithms to determine
content sanitization. All of these efforts benefit from recent advances in AI, which have
often been driven by increases in the amount of available data.
To fully realize the security and privacy benefits of today's ubiquitous information, the
security community needs expertise in the tools and techniques for managing that information,
namely, artificial intelligence technology, and the AI community needs an understanding of
security and privacy problems. To facilitate an exchange of ideas between these two communities,
we are holding the first workshop in "AISec" in conjunction with the 15th ACM Conference on
Computer and Communications Security (CCS), the new field of security and privacy solutions
that leverage AI technologies. The topics of interest include but are not limited to:
- Spam detection
- Fraud detection
- Botnet detection
- Intrusion detection
- Malware identification
- Insider threat detection
- Privacy-preserving data mining
- Inference detection and control
- Phishing detection and prevention
- Design and analysis of CAPTCHAs
- AI approaches to trust and reputation
- Machine learning techniques for optimizing user experience
- Vulnerability testing through intelligent probing (e.g. fuzzing)
- Content-driven security policy management & access control
- Techniques and methods for generating training and test set
For more information, please see
http://www.aisec.info.
WPES 2008
7th ACM Workshop on Privacy in the Electronic Society,
Held in conjunction with the 15th ACM Conference on Computer and Communication Security (CCS 2008),
Alexandria, VA, USA, October 27, 2008.
(Submissions due 12 May 2008) [posted here 4/21/08]
The need to consider privacy has been widely recognized in society at large,
with resulting impact on government, commerce, education, health care, entertainment,
and other sectors. This workshop discusses the problems related to privacy in the global
interconnected society and their possible solutions. The workshop seeks submissions from
academia and industry presenting novel research on all theoretical and practical
aspects of electronic privacy, as well as experimental studies of fielded systems.
We encourage submissions from other communities such as law and business that present
these communities' perspectives on technological issues. Topics of interest include,
but are not limited to:
- anonymity, pseudonymity, and unlinkability
- privacy and confidentiality management
- business models with privacy requirements
- privacy in electronic records
- protection from correlation, inference, and linking attacks
- privacy in health care and public administration
- electronic communication privacy
- public records and personal privacy
- information dissemination control
- privacy and virtual identity
- privacy-aware access control
- personally identifiable information
- privacy in the digital business
- privacy policy enforcement
- privacy enhancing technologies
- privacy and data mining
- privacy policies and their enforcement
- relationships between privacy and security
- privacy and anonymity in Web transactions
- user profiling
- privacy in social networks
- wireless privacy
- privacy threats
- economics of privacy
- privacy and human rights
- RFIDs and privacy
- privacy in mobile computing
- privacy in outsourced computing
- privacy in electronic voting
For more information, please see
http://dais.cs.uiuc.edu/wpes08.
QOP 2008
4th International Workshop on Quality of Protection,
Held in conjunction with the 15th ACM Conference on Computer and Communication Security (CCS 2008),
Alexandria, VA, USA, October 27, 2008.
(Submissions due 15 May 2008) [posted here 3/3/08]
In the last few decades, Information Security has gained numerous standards, industrial
certifications, and risk analysis methodologies. However, the field still lacks the strong, quantitative,
measurement-based assurance that we find in other fields. For example, Networking researchers
have created and utilize Quality of Service (QoS), Service Level Agreements (SLAs), and performance
evaluation measures. Empirical Software Engineering has made similar advances with software measures:
processes to measure the quality and reliability of software exist and are appreciated in industry.
Security looks different. Even a fairly sophisticated standard such as
ISO17799 has an intrinsically qualitative nature. Notions such as Security Metrics, Quality of
Protection (QoP) or Protection Level Agreement (PLA) have surfaced in the literature, but they
still have a qualitative flavor. Furthermore, many recorded security incidents have a non-IT cause.
As a result, security requires a much wider notion of "system" than do most other fields in
computer science. In addition to the IT infrastructure, the "system" in security includes users,
work processes, and organizational structures. The goal of the QoP Workshop is to help security
research progress towards a notion of Quality of Protection in Security comparable to the
notion of Quality of Service in Networking, Software Reliability, or measures in Empirical
Software Engineering. The topics of interest include but are not limited to:
- Industrial experience
- Security risk analysis
- Security measures
- Reliability analysis
- Security quality assurance
- Measurement-based decision making and risk management
- Empirical assessment of security architectures and solutions
- Mining data from attack and vulnerability repositories
- Measurement theory
- Formal theories of security measures
- Security measurement and monitoring
- Experimental validation of models
- Simulation and statistical analysis
- Stochastic modeling
For more information, please see
http://qop-workshop.org.
IFIP-ISM 2008
IFIP TC 11.1 11th Annual Working Conference on Information Security Management,
Hyderabad, India, December 16-20, 2008.
(Submissions due 15 May 2008) [posted here 4/7/08]
With the security of information becoming an evermore significant concern
of many organizations, information security management has become a real
concern for many individuals and organizations. Advanced safeguards are
required to protect the information assets of not only large but also
small and distributed enterprises. Effective approaches to information
security management, such as policies and certifications, are now required,
and must be supported by a range of technical and human-centric measures.
Topics of interest include, but are not limited to, the following:
- Formulating effective information security policies
- Establishing and maintaining security culture
- Security governance and compliance
- Strategies for managing security in SME environments
- Methodologies and techniques for certification and accreditation
- Standards for information security management
- Managing technology and people
- Organizing and assigning responsibility for security
- Outsourcing information security
- Risk assessment
- Measurement of security
- Requirements for awareness, training and education
- Evaluation of information security in companies
- Information security surveys and case studies
For more information, please see
http://security.isy.vcu.edu/.
SecPri-WiMob 2008
1st International Workshop on Security and Privacy in Wireless and
Mobile Computing, Networking and Communications,
Held in conjunction with the 4th IEEE International Conference on Wireless and Mobile
Computing, Networking and Communications (WiMob 2008),
Avignon, France, October 12, 2008.
(Submissions due 16 May 2008) [posted here 4/14/08]
Wireless and Mobile communication networks offer organizations and users several
benefits, such as portability, mobility and flexibility, while increasing
everyday business productivity, and reducing installation cost. However, although
Wireless and Mobile communication environments eliminate many of the problems
associated with traditional wired networks, the new security and privacy risks
introduced by such environments need to be reduced by exploiting appropriate
security measures and safeguards, ensuring an acceptable level of overall
residual hazard. The objectives of the SecPri-WiMob 2008 Workshop are to bring
together researchers from research communities in Wireless and Mobile Computing,
Networking and Communications, Security and Privacy, with the goal of
fostering interaction. We welcome the submission of papers from the full
spectrum of issues related with Security and Privacy in Wireless and Mobile
Computing, Networking and Communications. Papers may focus on protocols,
architectures, methods, technologies, applications, practical experiences,
simulation results and analysis, theory and validation on topics include,
but not limited to:
- Cryptographic Protocols for Mobile and Wireless Networks
- Key Management in Mobile and Wireless Computing
- Reasoning about Security and Privacy
- Privacy and Anonymity in Mobile and Wireless Computing
- Public Key Infrastructure in Mobile and Wireless Environments
- Economics of Security and Privacy in Wireless and Mobile environments
- Security Architectures and Protocols in Wireless LANs
- Security Architectures and Protocols in B3G/4G Mobile Networks
- Security and Privacy features into Mobile and Wearable devices
- Location Privacy
- Ad hoc Networks Security
- Sensor Networks Security
- Wireless Ad Hoc Networks Security
- Role of Sensors to Enable Security
- Security and Privacy in Pervasive Computing
- Trust Establishment, Negotiation, and Management
- Secure PHY/MAC/routing protocols
- Security under Resource Constraints (bandwidth, computation constraints, energy)
For more information, please see
http://www.aegean.gr/SecPri_WiMob_2008.
CRiSIS 2008
3rd International Conference on Risks and Security of Internet and Systems,
Tozeur, Tunisia, October 28-30, 2008.
(Submissions due 19 May 2008) [posted here 2/18/08]
The topics addressed by CRiSIS’2008 range from the analysis of faults,
risks, attacks and vulnerabilities to system survivability and adaptability,
passing through security policies and models, security and dependability
mechanisms and privacy enhancing technologies.
Topics include but are not limited to:
Models for specification, design and validation of security and dependability
- Security and trust models
- Models for security policies
- Formal methods, verification and certification
- UML and MDA for dependable systems
- Architectures for secure and dependable systems
- Self-protecting models and architectures
- Designing business models with security management
Management of security and dependability
- Management of risks, attacks and vulnerabilities
- Risk analysis, security and quality assurance
- Awareness of risks, attacks and vulnerabilities
- Metrology and security management
- Key management Infrastructure (PKI) and trust management
- Monitoring and management of faults
- Planning and executing of repair actions
- Adaptability management
Security and dependability techniques and mechanisms
- Authentication, authorization and audit
- Privacy protection and anonymization
- Intrusion detection and fraud detection
- Traceability and forensics
- Biometrics, watermarking, cryptography and security protocols
- Access and information flow controls
- Use of smartcards and personal devices
- Firewalls and intrusion detection systems
- Viruses, worms and malicious codes
- Attack data acquisition (honeypots) and network monitoring
- Adaptation of security policies
Secure and dependable systems
- Security and dependability of operating systems and network components
- Security of services oriented applications
- Security dependability of distributed and grid applications
- Fault tolerance of Internet applications
- Reflective middleware
- Security and safety of critical infrastructures
- Security and privacy of peer-to-peer system, wireless networks, VPN and embedded systems
- Security of new generation networks, security of Voice-over-IP and multimedia
- Self-protecting, self-stabilizing and self-healing systems
Secure and dependable applications
- Security in Electronic payment
- Security of electronic voting
- Security in e-health
- Dependability in e-learning
For more information, please see
http://www.redcad.org/crisis2008/.
ICICS 2008
10th International Conference on Information and Communications Security,
Birmingham, UK, October 20-22, 2008.
(Submissions due 20 May 2008) [posted here 3/24/08]
The event, which started in 1997, brings together individuals involved in multiple
disciplines of Information and Communications Security, in order to
foster the exchange of ideas. ICICS 2008 will be organised by the School
of Computer Science, University of Birmingham, in co-operation with HP
Laboratories (Bristol, UK) and the International Communications and
Information Security Association (ICISA).
Original papers on all aspects of information and communications
security are solicited for submission to ICICS 2008. Areas of interest
include, but are not limited to:
- Access control
- Anti-malware
- Anonymity
- Applied cryptography
- Authentication and authorization
- Biometric security
- Data and system integrity
- Database security
- Distributed systems security
- Electronic commerce
- Fraud control
- Grid security
- Information hiding and watermarking
- Intellectual property protection
- Intrusion detection
- Key management and key recovery
- Language-based security
- Operating system security
- Network security
- Risk evaluation and security certification
- Security for mobile computing
- Security models
- Security protocols
- Trusted computing
For more information, please see
http://events.cs.bham.ac.uk/icics08/.
DIM 2008
4th ACM Workshop on Digital Identity Management,
Held in conjunction with the 15th ACM Conference on Computer and Communication Security (CCS 2008),
Fairfax, VA, USA, October 31, 2008.
(Submissions due 23 May 2008) [posted here 3/3/08]
As the competitive edge of the global economy is shifting to
"services" delivered over the Internet, we need a way of making
identity available on-demand to the services in an open, scalable,
and secure manner. Identity for services is a holistic concern
that must satisfy technology, regulatory and business needs for
existing and emerging markets, such as Software as a Service (SaaS)
and Service Oriented Architectures (SOA). Identity services should
introduce consistency, efficiency and scalability in IT infrastructures
built on the Internet to form the new "identity layer". Also, it
should be easy for developers to incorporate identity services as part
of distributed application logic.
To fully achieve the potential benefits of identity managed as a set
of services, such as cost-effectiveness and shorter deployment times,
several security and privacy challenges must be addressed. Such
challenges arise because of the complex and distributed systems across
different organizations involved in identity service offerings. The goal
of the workshop is to lay the foundation and agenda for further research
and development in this area. Under the broad umbrella of "Services and
Identity", we encourage both researchers and practitioners to participate
and submit papers on topics including, but not limited to the following:
- Identity management for SaaS
- SOA for identity
- Scalability issues in identity management
- Resilient identity service provisioning
- Dynamic mutual trust negotiation
- SLA for identity services
- Identity based access control
- Migration to identity services
- Identity service discovery
- Virtual directories
- Identity management process assurance
- Identity life-cycle
- Externalization of identity
- Risk management for identity
- Identity oracles
- Translation and resolution of namespaces
- Network transport as a service
- Privacy and hosted services
- Mobile identities
- Balance between de-centralization of identity and centralization of controls
- Privacy preservation during orchestration of services in multiple domains
For more information, please see
http://www2.pflab.ecl.ntt.co.jp/dim2008.
DRM 2008
8th ACM Workshop on Digital Rights Management,
Held in conjunction with the 15th ACM Conference on Computer and Communication Security (CCS 2008),
Alexandria, VA, USA, October 27, 2008.
(Submissions due 23 May 2008) [posted here 3/10/08]
The ACM Workshop on Digital Rights Management is an international forum that
serves as an interdisplinary bridge between areas that can be applied to solving
the problem of Intellectual Property protection of digital content. These include:
cryptography, software and computer systems design, trusted computing, information
and signal processing, intellectual property law, policy-making, as well as business
analysis and economics. Its purpose is to bring together researchers from the above
fields for a full day of formal talks and informal discussions, covering new
results that will spur new investigations regarding the foundations and
practices of DRM.
For more information, please see
http://www.ece.unm.edu/DRM2008/.
StorageSS 2008
4th International Workshop on Storage Security and Survivability,
Held in conjunction with the 15th ACM Conference on Computer and Communication Security (CCS 2008),
Alexandria, VA, USA, October 27, 2008.
(Submissions due 23 May 2008) [posted here 5/5/08]
The 4th ACM International Workshop on Storage Security and
Survivability (StorageSS 2008) will bring together researchers in
storage systems, computer and network security, and cryptography. We
encourage paper submissions from both research and industry presenting
novel ideas on all theoretical and practical aspects of protecting
data in storage and file systems. TOPICS OF INTEREST include, but aren't
limited to:
- storage protection tradeoffs
- storage protection deployment (including case studies)
- smart storage for security and/or survivability
- analysis of covert storage channels and leaks
- mobile storage protection
- novel backup protection techniques
- protection using versioning
- storage encryption techniques (modes of operation, fast software/hardware encryption)
- key management techniques
- encrypted keyword search and database query
- security analysis of deployed file/volume encryptor, encrypted disc
- tamper-evident storage protection techniques
- immutable storage protection techniques, provenance
- storage threat models
- storage intrusion detection systems
- security for long-term / archival storage
- privacy and trust issues in (untrusted) remote/hosted storage
- TPM and storage security
For more information, please see
http://storagess.org/2008/.
SecCo 2008
6th International Workshop on Security Issues in Concurrency,
Toronto, Canada, August 23, 2008.
(Submissions due 26 May 2008) [posted here 4/21/08]
Emerging trends in concurrency theory require the definition of models and
languages adequate for the design and management of new classes of applications,
mainly to program either WANs (like Internet) or smaller networks of mobile and
portable devices (which support applications based on a dynamically reconfigurable
communication structure). Due to the openness of these systems, new critical
aspects come into play, such as the need to deal with malicious components
or with a hostile environment. Current research on network security issues
(e.g. secrecy, authentication, etc.) usually focuses on opening cryptographic
point-to-point tunnels. Therefore, the proposed solutions in this area are
not always exploitable to support the end-to-end secure interaction
between entities whose availability or location is not known beforehand.
The aim of the workshop is to cover the gap between the security and the
concurrency communities. More precisely, the workshop promotes the exchange of ideas,
trying to focus on common interests and stimulating discussions on central research
questions. In particular, we look for papers dealing with security issues (such as
authentication, integrity, privacy, confidentiality, access control, denial of service,
service availability, safety aspects, fault tolerance, trust, language-based security)
in emerging fields like web services, mobile ad-hoc networks, agent-based infrastructures,
peer-to-peer systems, context-aware computing, global/ubiquitous/pervasive computing.
For more information, please see
http://www.lsv.ens-cachan.fr/SecCo08/.
June 2008
ACSAC 2008
24th Annual Computer Security Applications Conference,
Anaheim, California, December 8-12, 2008.
(Submissions due 1 June 2008) [posted here 4/21/08]
ACSAC is an internationally recognized forum where practitioners, researchers,
and developers in information system security meet to learn and to exchange
practical ideas and experiences. Papers offering novel contributions in
any aspect of computer and application security are solicited. Papers may
present technique, applications, or practical experience, or theory that
has a clear practical impact. Papers are encouraged on technologies and
methods that have been demonstrated to be useful for improving information
systems security and that address lessons from actual application.
Topics of interest include, but are not limited to:
- access control
- applied cryptography
- audit and audit reduction
- biometrics
- boundary control devices
- certification and accreditation
- database security
- defensive information warfare
- denial of service protection
- electronic commerce security
- enterprise security
- forensics
- identification and authentication
- identity management
- incident response planning
- information survivability
- insider threat protection
- integrity
- intellectual property rights protection
- intrusion detection
- malware
- multimedia security
- operating systems security
- peer-to-peer security
- privacy and anonymity
- product evaluation criteria and compliance
- risk/vulnerability assessment
- secure location services
- security engineering and management
- security in IT outsourcing
- service oriented architectures
- software assurance
- trust management
- virtualization security
- voip security
For more information, please see
http://www.acsac.org.
VMSec 2008
1st ACM Workshop on Virtual Machine Security,
Held in conjunction with the 15th ACM Conference on Computer and Communication Security (CCS 2008),
Fairfax, VA, USA, October 31, 2008.
(Submissions due 2 June 2008) [posted here 4/21/08]
This workshop, the first of its kind to deal exclusively with virtual machine security,
will tackle the important research topics in virtualization security. Virtualization
has seen an explosion in growth in deployment, implementations, and applications.
Virtualization holds unique properties that make it attractive for security including
isolation, compartmentalization, live state capture, and replay. Virtualization
has been used to study malicious software as well as to prevent malicious software
infection. In addition, virtualization itself is now the subject of attack. This workshop
aims to bring together leading researchers in the fields of virtualization and security
to present the latest work on these topics. Scope and topics include:
- Applications of virtualization for security
- Security and integrity of virtual machines
- Detecting virtualization
- Evading virtualization
- Trapping malicious code via virtualization
- Economic implications of virtualization
- Attacks and vulnerabilities against virtualization environments
- Honey Nets and Honey Client architectures, systems, and results
- Management and control of virtual machine farms for security
- Forensics using virtualization
- Enhancing privacy and anonymity using virtualization
- Measuring security and performance of virtualization
- Instrumentation and control of virtualization
- Performance optimization of virtual machines
- Performance and security analysis of lightweight virtualization
- Virtualization for mobile devices
- Vulnerabilities in virtualization environments
For more information, please see
http://csis.gmu.edu/VMSec/.
NPSec 2008
4th workshop on Secure Network Protocols,
Held in conjunction with the 16th IEEE International Conference on Network Protocols (ICNP 2008),
Orlando, Florida, USA, October 19, 2008.
(Submissions due 6 June 2008) [posted here 5/5/08]
NPSec focuses on two general areas. The first focus is on the development and
analysis of secure or hardened protocols for the operation (establishment and maintenance)
of network infrastructure, including such targets as secure multidomain, ad hoc, sensor
or overlay networks, or other related target areas. This can include new protocols,
enhancements to existing protocols, protocol analysis, and new attacks on existing
protocols. The second focus is on employing such secure network protocols to create
or enhance network applications. Examples include collaborative firewalls, incentive
strategies for multiparty networks, and deployment strategies to enable secure
applications. NPSec 2008 particularly welcomes new ideas on security in the context
of future Internet design, such as architectural considerations for future Internet
security and new primitives for supporting secure network protocol and application
design. Topics of interest include but are not limited to:
- security in future Internet architectures
- secure and/or resilient network protocols, e.g. (internetworking/routing, MANETs,
LANs and WLANs, mobile/cellular data networks, p2p and other overlay networks,
federated trust systems, sensor networks)
- vulnerabilities of existing protocols and applications (both theoretical and case studies), including attacks
- key distribution/management
- intrusion detection and response
- incentive systems for p2p systems and MANETs routing
- secure protocol configuration and deployment
For more information, please see
http://www.netsec.colostate.edu/npsec08/.
OSSCoNF 2008
1st Workshop on Open Source Software for Computer and Network Forensics,
Held in conjunction with the 4th International Conference on Open Source Systems (OSS 2008),
Milan, Italy, September 7-10, 2008.
(Submissions due 7 June 2008) [posted here 2/25/08]
OSSCoNF aims at creating an informal, but selected academic venue to discuss
the benefits (and drawbacks, if any) of using Free, Libre, and Open Source
Software (FLOSS) for computer and network forensics, incident management and
digital investigations. The main topics of interest for the workshop are:
- FLOSS tools for Evidence Management
- Tools for acquisition, collection, and storage of digital evidence
- Tools for identification, authentication, integrity preservation of digital evidence
- FLOSS tools for Analysis and Identification of Evidence
- Tools for the analysis and search of digital evidence
- Tools for cybercrime scenarios reconstruction, correlation and data mining applied to digital forensics
- Tools for analysis of embedded or non-traditional devices such as cellphones, cameras...
- FLOSS tools for analysis of cybercrime
- Data mining systems for cyber-crime strategy analysis and modeling
- Systems for data collection and monitoring of attack trends
- FLOSS tools validation and test cases, or FLOSS validation approaches for proprietary tools
- FLOSS tools for the automation of the forensic process and case management
For more information, please see
http://conferenze.dei.polimi.it/ossconf.
InSPEC 2008
International Workshop on Security and Privacy in Enterprise Computing,
Held in conjunction with the 12th IEEE International EDOC Conference (EDOC 2008),
Munich, Germany, September 15, 2008.
(Submissions due 13 June 2008) [posted here 4/7/08]
Several technologies have emerged for enterprise computing. Today, services
are becoming the new building blocks of enterprise systems and service-oriented
architectures are combining them in a flexible and novel way. These technological
trends are accompanied by new business trends due to globalization that involve
innovative forms of collaborations. All of these trends bring with them new
challenges to the security and privacy of enterprise computing. New concepts
for solving these challenges require the combination of many disciplines from
computer science and information systems, such as cryptography, networking,
distributed systems, process modeling and design, access control, privacy etc.
It is the goal of this workshop to provide a forum for exchange of novel research
in these areas among the experts from academia and industry. Topics include:
Security and privacy in workflow systems
- Access control architectures
- Modeling of security and privacy constraints
- Automatic security augmentation
- Secure/Trusted virtual domains
Security and privacy in service-oriented architectures
- Secure composition of services
- Semantic aware security
- Security services
- Trustworthy computation
Identity Management
- Security and Privacy
- Applications to compliance
- Effective use in business IT systems
Data sharing
- Cryptographic protection during data sharing
- Privacy-preserving distributed applications
- Efficient multi-party computations
- Privacy and data sharing policies
Security and privacy in management information systems
- Novel secure applications
- Secure and private data analytics
- Flexible and seamless security architectures
- Secure operating system design
Collaborations
- Secure and private supply chains
- Security and privacy in virtual organizations
- Private social network and Web 2.0 applications
- Security and privacy in outsourcing
For more information, please see
http://ra.crema.unimi.it/inspec2008/.
SKM 2008
Workshop on Secure Knowledge Management,
Richardson, Texas, USA, November 3-4, 2008.
(Submissions due 13 June 2008) [posted here 5/5/08]
Knowledge management is the methodology for systematically gathering, organizing,
and disseminating information. It essentially consists of processes and tools to
effectively capture and share data as well as use the knowledge of individuals
within an organization. Knowledge Management Systems (KMS) promote sharing
information among employees and should contain security features to prevent
any unauthorized access. Security is becoming a major issue revolving around
KMS. Security methods may include authentication or passwords, cryptography
programs, intrusion detection systems or access control systems. Issues
include insider threat (protecting from malicious insiders), infrastructure
protection (securing against subversion attacks) and establishing correct
policies and refinement and enforcement. Furthermore KMS content is much
more sensitive than raw data stored in databases and issues of privacy
also become important.
Since the attacks in 2001, many organizations, especially the US government,
have increased their concern about KMS. With the advent of intranets and
web-access, it is even more crucial to protect corporate knowledge as numerous
individuals now have access to the assets of a corporation. Therefore, we need
effective mechanisms for securing data, information, and knowledge as well as the
applications. The proposed workshop in Secure Knowledge Management will help in
raising the awareness of academics and practitioners in this critical area of
research and develop important questions that need to be tackled by the research community.
Topics of interest include, and are not limited to:
- Secure Languages (Secure Knowledge Query Manipulation Language, Security Assertion
Markup Language, B2B Circles of Trust)
- Return of Investment on Secure Knowledge Systems
- Digital Rights Management (Digital Policy Management)
- Secure Content Management (Secure Content Management in Authorized Domains,
Secure Content Delivery, Content Trust Index)
- Knowledge Management for National Security (Securing and Sharing What We Know:
Privacy, Trust and Knowledge Management, Identity Security Guarantee, Building
Trust and Security in the B2B Marketplace)
- Security and Privacy in Knowledge Management
- Wireless security in the context of Knowledge Management
For more information, please see
http://cs.utdallas.edu/skm2008/call_for_papers.htm.
TrustCom 2008
The 2008 International Symposium on Trusted Computing,
Central South University, Zhang Jia Jie, China, November 18-20, 2008.
(Submissions due 15 June 2008) [posted here 4/28/08]
This symposium, held in conjunction with The 9th International Conference
for Young Computer Scientists (ICYCS 2008), brings together researchers and
engineers from academia, government and industry working on topics of
trusted computing with regard to security, safety, privacy, reliability,
dependability, survivability, availability, and fault tolerance aspects
of computer systems and networks. The aim is to provide a forum for them
to present and discuss emerging ideas and trends in this highly challenging
research field. Main topics of interest include, but are not limited to:
- Semantics, metrics and models of trust
- Trust establishment, propagation, and management
- Trusted computing platform
- Trusted network computing
- Trusted operating system
- Trusted software
- Trusted database
- Trusted services and applications
- Trust in e-commerce and e-government
- Trust in mobile and wireless networks
- Cryptography and security protocols
- Reliable and fault-tolerant computer systems/networks
- Survivable computer systems/networks
- Authentication in computer systems/networks
- Access control in computer systems/networks
- Key management in computer systems/networks
For more information, please see
http://trust.csu.edu.cn/conference/trustcom2008/.
SIS 2008
3rd International Workshop on Secure Information Systems,
Wisla, Poland, October 20-22, 2008.
(Submissions due 15 June 2008) [posted here 4/21/08]
The SIS workshop is envisioned as a forum to promote the exchange of
ideas and results addressing complex security issues that arise in
modern information systems. We aim at bringing together a community of
security researchers and practitioners working in such divers areas as
networking security, antivirus protection, intrusion detection,
cryptography, security protocols, and others. We would like to promote
an integrated view at the security of information systems.
Covered topics include (but are not limited to):
- Access control
- Adaptive security
- Cryptography
- Copyright protection
- Cyberforensics
- Honeypots
- Information hiding
- Intrusion detection
- Network security
- Privacy
- Secure commerce
- Security exploits
- Security policies
- Security protocols
- Security services
- Security evaluation and prediction
- Software protection
- Trusted computing
- Threat modeling
- Usability and security
- Viruses and worms
- Zero-configuration security mechanisms
For more information, please see
http://www.sis.imcsit.org/.
STC 2008
3rd ACM Workshop on Scalable Trusted Computing,
Held in conjunction with the 15th ACM Conference on Computer and Communication Security (CCS 2008),
Fairfax, VA, USA, October 31, 2008.
(Submissions due 16 June 2008) [posted here 3/31/08]
Built on the continuous success of ACM STC'06 and STC'07, this
workshop focuses on fundamental technologies of trusted computing
and its applications in large-scale systems -- those involving
large number of users and parties with varying degrees of trust.
The workshop is intended to serve as a forum for researchers as
well as practitioners to disseminate and discuss recent advances
and emerging issues. Topics of interests include but not limited to:
- security policies and models of trusted computing
- architecture and implementation technologies for trusted platform
- limitations, alternatives and tradeoffs regarding trusted computing
- trust in authentications, users and computing services
- hardware based trusted computing
- software based trusted computing
- pros and cons of hardware based approach
- remote attestation of trusted devices
- censorship-freeness in trusted computing
- cryptographic support in trusted computing
- case study in trusted computing
- applications of trusted computing
- intrusion resilience in trusted computing
- access control for trusted computing
- principles for handling scales
- scalable trust supports and services
- trusted embedded computing and systems
- trusted computing in networks and distributed systems
- virtualization and trusted computing
For more information, please see
http://www.sisa.samsung.com/innovation/stc08.
SERENE 2008
RISE/EFTS Joint International Workshop
on Software Engineering for REsilieNt systEms,
Newcastle upon Tyne, UK, November 17-19, 2008.
(Submissions due 23 June 2008) [posted here 4/21/08]
The SERENE 2008 workshop is an international forum for researchers and practitioners
interested in the advances in Software Engineering for Resilient Systems. SERENE 2008
views resilient systems as open distributed systems that have capabilities to
dynamically adapt, in a predictable way, to unexpected and harmful events,
including faults and errors. Engineering such systems is a challenging issue
which needs urgent attention from and combined efforts by people working in various
domains. Achieving this objective is a very complex task, since it implies reasoning
explicitly and in a consistent way about systems functional and non-functional
characteristics. SERENE advocates the idea that resilience should be explicitly included
into traditional software engineering theories and practices and should become an
integral part of all steps of software development. As current software engineering
practices tend to either capture only normal behaviour, or to deal with all abnormal
situations only at the late development phases, new software engineering methods and
tools need to be developed to support explicit handling of abnormal situations
through the whole software life cycle. Moreover, every phase of the software
development process needs to be enriched with the phase-specific resilience means.
The following constitutes a list of the key software engineering domains that
the SERENE workshop will focus on. This list should not, however, be considered as
closed or technically restrictive:
- Formal and semi-formal modelling of resilience properties
- Re-engineering for resilience
- Software development processes for resilience
- Requirement engineering processes for resilience
- Model Driven Engineering of resilient systems
- Verification and validation of resilient systems
- Error and fault handling in the software life-cycle
- Resilience through exception handling in the software life-cycle
- Frameworks and design patterns for resilience
- Software architectures for resilience
- Component-based development and resilience
- System structuring for resilience
- Atomic actions
- Dynamic resilience mechanisms
- Resilience prediction
- Resilience metadata
- Reasoning and adaptation services for improving and ensuring resilience
- Intelligent and adaptive approaches to engineering resilient systems
- Engineering of self-healing autonomic systems
- Dynamic reconfiguration for resilience
- Run-time management of resilience requirements
- CASE tools for developing resilient systems
For more information, please see
http://serene2008.uni.lu.
PiLBA 2008
International Workshop on Privacy in Location-Based Applications,
Held in conjunction with the the 13th European Symposium on Research in Computer Security (ESORICS 2008),
Malaga, Spain, October 10, 2008.
(Submissions due 30 June 2008) [posted here 4/7/08]
Although data security and privacy issues have been extensively investigated
in several domains, the current available techniques are not readily applicable
for privacy protection in location based applications (LBA). An example application
is a Location Based Service, which is typically invoked through mobile devices
that can include location and movement information in service requests. Other
location based applications use similar data, possibly stored in a moving object
database, to solve various kinds of optimization problems, to perform statistical
analysis of specific phenomena, as well as to predict potentially critical
situations. While location data can be very effective for better services and
can enable new kind of services, it poses serious threats to the privacy of
users. LBA in travel, logistics, health care, and other industries already exist
and are poised to proliferate. Examples include the identification of resources
close to the user (e.g., the closest pharmacy), and the identification of the
optimal route to reach a destination from the user's position considering
traffic conditions and possibly other constraints. One of the critical issues
for a wide-spread deployment of these applications is how to conciliate the
effectiveness and quality of these services with privacy concerns. They bring
unique challenges mostly due to the richness of location and time information
that is necessarily connected to location based applications. The research in
this field involves aspects of spatio-temporal reasoning, query processing,
system security, statistical inference, and anonymization techniques. Several
research groups have been working in the recent years to identify privacy
attacks and defense techniques in this domain. Topics of interest include
everything involving privacy aspects arising
in the design, development and deployment of location-based applications.
Examples are the following:
- Formal models of attacks and defenses in LBA
- Anonymization/Pseudonymization in LBA
- Sensitive data obfuscation in LBA
- Authorization and Access Control involving spatio-temporal data
- Publication of micro-data acquired through LBA
- Privacy preserving data mining on geographically referenced data
- Statistical approaches to privacy preservation in LBA
- Trust Management in LBA
- Applied Cryptography for LBA
For more information, please see
http://pilba.dico.unimi.it.
July 2008
ICISS 2008
4th International Conference on Information Systems Security,
Hyderabad, India, December 16-20, 2008.
(Submissions due 19 July 2008) [posted here 4/7/08]
The ICISS 2008 encourages submissions from academia, industry and government
addressing theoretical and practical problems in information and
systems security and related areas. Topics of interest include but are
not limited to:
- Application Security
- Authentication and Access Control
- Biometric Security
- Data Security
- Digital Forensics and Diagnostics
- Digital Rights Management
- Distributed System Security
- Formal Methods in Security
- Intrusion Detection, Prevention and Response
- Intrusion Tolerance and Recovery
- Key Management and Cryptographic Protocols
- Language-based Security
- Malware Analysis and Mitigation
- Network Security
- Operating System Security
- Privacy and Anonymity
- Security in P2P, Sensor and Ad Hoc Networks
- Software Security
- Vulnerability Detection and Mitigation
- Web Security
For more information, please see
http://www.seclab.cs.sunysb.edu/iciss08/.
NordSec 2008
13th Nordic Workshop on Secure IT Systems,
Copenhagen, Denmark, October 9-10, 2008.
(Submissions due 23 July 2008) [posted here 4/28/08]
The NordSec workshops are focused on applied computer security and are intended
to encourage interchange and cooperation between research and industry.
NordSec 2008 is organized by the Technical University of Denmark. NordSec 2008
has a special focus on "Security for the Citizens"; papers and extended abstracts
on this topic are especially welcome. Topics include,
but are not limited to, the following areas of computer security:
- Applied Cryptography
- Commercial Security Policies and Enforcement
- Communication and Network Security
- Computer Crime and Information Warfare
- Hardware and Smart Card Applications
- Internet and Web Security
- Intrusion Detection
- Language-based Techniques for Security
- New Ideas and Paradigms in Security
- Operating System Security
- PKI Systems and Key Escrow
- Privacy and Anonymity
- Security Education and Training
- Security Evaluations and Measurements
- Security Management and Audit
- Security Models
- Security Protocols
- Social-Engineering and Phishing
- Software Security, Attacks, and Defenses
- Trust and Trust Management
For more information, please see
http://lbt.imm.dtu.dk/nsd08/nordsec08/.
August 2008
September 2008
ICIW 2009
4th International Conference on Information Warfare and Security,
Breakwater Lodge, Cape Town, South Africa, March 26-27, 2009.
(Submissions due 4 September 2008) [posted here 5/5/08]
Information warfare and security are at the forefront of modern defence strategies.
Strong strands of research and interest are developing in the area, including the
understanding of threats and risks to information systems, the development of a
strong security culture, as well as incident detection and post incident investigation.
The International Conference on Information Warfare and Security (ICIW) offers
an opportunity for academics, practitioners and consultants from the US,
North America and elsewhere who are involved in the study, management, development
and implementation of systems and concepts related to information warfare or are
interested in ways to improve information systems security, to come together and
exchange ideas. This conference is continuing to establish itself as a key
event for individuals working in the field from around the world.
For more information, please see
http://academic-conferences.org/iciw/iciw2009/iciw09-home.htm.
October 2008
IFIP-DF 2009
5th Annual IFIP WG 11.9 International Conference on Digital Forensics,
Orlando, Florida, USA, January 25-28, 2009.
(Submissions due 15 October 2008) [posted here 4/14/08]
The IFIP Working Group 11.9 on Digital Forensics (www.ifip119.org) is an active
international community of scientists, engineers and practitioners dedicated to
advancing the state of the art of research and practice in the emerging field of
digital forensics. The Fifth Annual IFIP WG 11.9 International Conference on
Digital Forensics will provide a forum for presenting original, unpublished
research results and innovative ideas related to the extraction, analysis
and preservation of all forms of electronic evidence. Keynote presentations, revised
papers and details of panel discussions will be published as an edited volume -
the fifth in the series entitled Research Advances in Digital Forensics (Springer)
in the summer of 2009. Technical papers are solicited in all areas related to
the theory and practice of digital forensics. Areas of special interest include,
but are not limited to:
- Theories, techniques and tools for extracting, analyzing and preserving digital evidence
- Network forensics
- Portable electronic device forensics
- Digital forensic processes and workflow models
- Digital forensic case studies
- Legal, ethical and policy issues related to digital forensics
For more information, please see
http://www.ifip119.org.
Journal of Privacy Technology (JOPT),
Editor-in-Chief: Michael Shamos
This online-only Journal, started in 2004 and operated by Carnegie
Mellon University, is a forum for the publication of original
current research in privacy technology. It encourages the submission
of any material dealing primarily with the technological aspects of
privacy or with the privacy aspects of technology, which may include
analysis of the interaction between policy and technology or the
technological implications of legal decisions. More information can
be found at http://www.jopt.org/.
IEEE Security and Privacy Magazine, Editor-in-Chief:
George Cybenko
IEEE Security & Privacy provides a unique combination of research
articles, case studies, tutorials, and regular departments covering
diverse aspects of information assurance such as legal and ethical
issues, privacy concerns, tools to help secure information, analysis
of vulnerabilities and attacks, trends and new developments,
pedagogical and curricular issues in educating the next generation
of security professionals, secure operating systems and
applications, security issues in wireless networks, design and test
strategies for secure and survivable systems, and cryptology. More
information can be found at
http://computer.org/security/.
ACM Transactions on Information and System Security,
Editor-in-Chief: Michael Reiter
ACM invites submissions for its Transactions on Information and
System Security, inaugurated in November 1998. TISSEC publishes
original archival-quality research papers and technical notes in all
areas of information and system security including technologies,
systems, applications, and policies. Papers should have practical
relevance to the construction, evaluation, application, or operation
of secure systems. Theoretical papers will be accepted only if there
is convincing argument for the practical significance of the
results. Theory must be justified by convincing examples
illustrating its application. More information is given on the
journal web page at
http://www.acm.org/tissec.
IEEE Transactions on Dependable and Secure Computing,
Editor-in-Chief: Ravishankar K. Iyer
The IEEE Transactions on Dependable and Secure Computing publishes
archival research results related to research into foundations,
methodologies, and mechanisms that support the achievement—through
design, modeling, and evaluation—of systems and networks that are
dependable and secure to the desired degree without compromising
performance. The focus will also include measurement, modeling, and
simulation techniques, and foundations for jointly evaluating,
verifying, and designing for performance, security, and dependability
constraints. More information is given on the
journal web page at
http://www.computer.org/tdsc/.
The Kluwer International Series on ADVANCES IN INFORMATION
SECURITY.
The purpose of the Advances in Information Security book series is
to establish the state of the art and set the course for future
research in information security. The scope of this series includes
not only all aspects of computer and network security, but related
areas such as fault tolerance and software assurance. The series
will serve as a central source of reference for information security
research and developments. The series aims to publish thorough and
cohesive overviews on specific topics in Information Security, as
well as works that are larger in scope than survey articles and that
will contain more detailed background information. The series also
provides a single point of coverage of advanced and timely topics
and a forum for topics that may not have reached a level of maturity
to warrant a comprehensive textbook. Prospective Authors or Editors:
If you have an idea for a book that would fit in this series, we
would welcome the opportunity to review your proposal. Should you
wish to discuss any potential project further or receive specific
information regarding book proposal requirements, please contact
either Sushil Jajodia (jajodia@gmu.edu,703-993-1653) or Lance Wobus
(lance.wobus@wkap.com, 781-681-0602)
Journal of Computer Security,
Editor-in-Chief: Sushil Jadodia and Jonathan Millen
JCS is an archival research journal for significant advances in
computer security. Subject areas include architecture, operating systems,
database systems, networks, authentication, distributed systems,
formal models, verification, algorithms, mechanisms, and policies.
Submissions: send six copies to one of the editors in chief:
Sushil Jadodia, CSIS, George Mason University, 440 University Drive,
Fairfax, VA 22030, or Jonathan Millen, The MITRE Corporation,
202 Burlington Rd., Bedford, MA. Subscriptions: contact IOS Press,
Niewe Hemweg 6B, 1013 BG Amsterdam, Netherlands, (e-mail: order@iospress.nl)
for information about individual or institutional subscriptions or back issues.
More information is given on the journal web page at
http://www.mitre.org/jcs.
Computers & Security,
Editor-in-Chief: E. Schultz
Computers & Security aims to satisfy the needs of managers
and experts involved in computer security by providing a blend of
research developments, innovations, and practical management advice.
Original submissions on all computer security topics are invited,
particularly those of practical benefit to the practitioner. Four
copies of papers from 5-10,000 words should be sent to the editor,
N. Dudley, at Elsevier Advanced Technology, P.O. Box 150,
Kidlington, Oxford, OX5 1AS, United Kingdom. Telephones: voice
+44(0)1865 843848 / 843000; fax +44 (0) 1865 843971. More
information can be found at
http://www.elsevier.com/locate/issn/01674048.
International Journal of Information Security,
Editors-in-Chief: D. Gollmann; J. Lopez; C.A. Meadows; E. Okamoto
The International Journal of Information Security, IJIS, aims to
provide prompt publication of important technical work in
information security, attracting any person interested in
communications, commerce, banking, medicine, or other areas of
endeavor affected by information security. Any research submission
on theory, applications, and implementations of information security
is welcomed. This includes, but is not limited to, system security,
network security, content protection, applications and foundations
of information security. More information is given on the journal
web page at
http://link.springer.de/link/service/journals/10207/index.htm.
International Journal of Network Security,
Editors-in-Chief: Min-Shiang Hwang
International Journal of Network Security is an international
official journal of Science Publications, publishing original articles,
reviews and short communications of a high scientific and technology
in network security. Subjects covered include: access control,
computer security, cryptography, communications security, data security,
database security, electronic commerce security, information security,
multimedia security, and network security. Authors are strongly encouraged
to submit their papers electronically by using online manuscript submission
at
http://ijns.nchu.edu.tw/, or submit their Word, ps or pdf file
to the editor-in-chief (via Email: mshwang@isrc.nchu.edu.tw): Min-Shiang Hwang,
at the Department of Management Information Systems,
National Chung Hsing University, Taiwan, R.O.C. More
information can be found at
http://ijns.nchu.edu.tw/.
International Journal of Security and Networks,
Editors-in-Chief: Yang Xiao
International Journal of Security and Networks is an archival research journal
for significant advances in network security. Subject areas include attack models,
security mechanisms, security services, authentication, authorization, access control,
multicast security, data confidentiality, data integrity, non-repudiation, forensics,
privacy protection, secure protocols, formal analyses, intrusion detection,
key management, trust establishment, revocation of malicious parties, security policies,
fraudulent usage, dependability and reliability, prevention of traffic analysis,
network security performance evaluation, tradeoff analysis between performance and
security, security standards, etc. All papers must be submitted online
at
http://www.inderscience.com/ijsn/. More information is given on
the journal web page at
http://www.inderscience.com/ijsn/.
IEEE Transactions on Information Forensics and Security,
Editors-in-Chief: Pierre Moulin
IEEE Transactions on Information Forensics and Security aims to
provide a unified locus for archival research on the fundamental contributions
and the mathematics behind information forensics, information security,
surveillance, and systems applications that incorporate these features.
Authors are strongly encouraged
to submit their papers electronically to the online manuscript system,
Manuscript Central, via
sps-ieee.manuscriptcentral.com. More
information can be found at
http://www.ieee.org/organizations/society/sp/tifs.html.
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