The Computer Security Foundations Symposium (CSF) is an annual conference for researchers in computer security, to examine current theories of security, the formal models that provide a context for those theories, and techniques for verifying security. It was created in 1988 as a workshop of the IEEE Computer Society’s Technical Committee on Security and Privacy, in response to a 1986 essay by Don Good entitled “The Foundations of Computer Security—We Need Some.” The meeting became a “symposium” in 2007, along with a policy for open, increased attendance. Over the past two decades, many seminal papers and techniques have been presented first at CSF. For more details on the history of the symposium, visit CSF’s home.
The program includes papers, panels, and a poster session. Topics of interest include access control, information flow, covert channels, cryptographic protocols, database security, language-based security, authorization and trust, verification techniques, integrity and availability models, and broad discussions concerning the role of formal methods in computer security and the nature of foundational research in this area.
Summer cycle paper submission | July 24, 2025 |
Summer cycle author notification | September 25, 2025 |
Fall cycle paper submission | October 9, 2025 |
Fall cycle author notification | December 11, 2025 |
Winter cycle paper submission | January 29, 2026 |
Winter cycle author notification | April 1, 2026 |
CSF Symposium | July 26-29, 2026 |
Sponsored by IEEE Computer Society's Technical Commitee on Security and Privacy.