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    <p>We are extending the LangSec 2022 deadline to Feb 7th, 2022; we
      hope to see your submission this year!<br>
    </p>
    <div class="moz-text-flowed" style="font-family: -moz-fixed;
      font-size: 14px;" lang="x-unicode">Apologies for multiple
      postings. </div>
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    <div class="moz-text-flowed" style="font-family: -moz-fixed;
      font-size: 14px;" lang="x-unicode">Call for Papers<br>
      8th Workshop on Language-Theoretic Security (LangSec)<br>
      Affiliated with 43rd IEEE Symposium on Security and Privacy
      (Oakland)<br>
      May 26th, 2022<br>
      <br>
      The Language-Theoretic Security (LangSec) workshop solicits<br>
      contributions of research papers, work-in-progress reports, and
      panels<br>
      related to the growing area of language-theoretic security.<br>
      <br>
      Submission Guidelines: see <a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="https://urldefense.com/v3/__http://langsec.org/spw21/__;!!IBzWLUs!DOlkoY5jWMp9SEdrC3ExgtCK_0xuFb5AQjITpz4Fh0OHIpe88cQtF_FHx77dt0VRS9QcfY1DD7ASJg$">http://langsec.org/spw22/</a><br>
      <br>
      Submission link: <a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=langsec2022__;!!IBzWLUs!DOlkoY5jWMp9SEdrC3ExgtCK_0xuFb5AQjITpz4Fh0OHIpe88cQtF_FHx77dt0VRS9QcfY3-_2JX8w$">https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=langsec2022</a></div>
    <br>
    <div class="moz-text-flowed" style="font-family: -moz-fixed;
      font-size: 14px;" lang="x-unicode"> Important Dates:<br>
      Research paper submissions due: Feb 7th 2022, AOE<br>
      Work-in-progress reports and panels submissions due:<br>
        Feb 7th 2022, AOE<br>
      Notification to authors: Feb 28th 2022<br>
      Camera ready: March 17th 2022<br>
      <br>
      Topics: LangSec posits that the only path to trustworthy computer<br>
      software that takes untrusted inputs is treating all valid or
      expected<br>
      inputs as a formal language, and the respective input-handling
      routine<br>
      as a parser for that language. The parsing must be feasible, and
      the<br>
      parser must match the language in required computation power and<br>
      convert the input for the consumption of subsequent computation. 
      The<br>
      7th installation of the workshop will continue the tradition and<br>
      further focus on research that apply the language-theoretic<br>
      perspective to policy mechanisms, such as treating policy
      formulation<br>
      and enforcement as language definition and language recognition<br>
      problems. The following is a non-exhaustive list of topics that
      are of<br>
      relevance to LangSec:</div>
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    * formalization of vulnerabilities and exploits in terms of language<br>
      theory<br>
    * inference of formal language specifications of data from samples<br>
    * generation of secure parsers from formal language specifications<br>
    * complexity hierarchy of verifying parser implementations<br>
    * science of protocol design: layering, fragmentation and
    re-assembly,<br>
      extensibility, etc.<br>
    * architectural constructs for enforcing limits on computational<br>
      complexity<br>
    * empirical data on programming language features/programming styles<br>
      that affect bug introduction rates (e.g., syntactic redundancy)<br>
    * systems architectures and designs based on LangSec principles<br>
    * computer languages, file formats, and network protocols built on<br>
      LangSec principles<br>
    * re-engineering efforts of existing languages, formats, and
    protocols<br>
      to reduce computational power<br>
    <br>
    Chairs<br>
    PC co-chair: Gang Tan (Pennsylvania State University)<br>
    PC co-chair: Sergey Bratus (Dartmouth College)<br>
    <br>
    Contact:<br>
    All questions about submissions should be emailed to the PC chairs:<br>
    Gang Tan (<a class="moz-txt-link-abbreviated moz-txt-link-freetext" href="mailto:gtan@psu.edu">gtan@psu.edu</a>) and Sergey Bratus (<a class="moz-txt-link-abbreviated moz-txt-link-freetext" href="mailto:sergey@cs.dartmouth.edu">sergey@cs.dartmouth.edu</a>)
    <pre class="moz-signature" cols="72">-- 

Gang (Gary) Tan
Professor, Penn State CSE and ICDS
W358 Westgate Building
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="https://urldefense.com/v3/__http://www.cse.psu.edu/*gxt29__;fg!!IBzWLUs!DOlkoY5jWMp9SEdrC3ExgtCK_0xuFb5AQjITpz4Fh0OHIpe88cQtF_FHx77dt0VRS9QcfY3ejQz_DA$">http://www.cse.psu.edu/~gxt29</a>
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="Tel:814-8657364">Tel:814-8657364</a></pre>
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