[TYPES/announce] SecDev 2019 submission deadline extended: April 22
Stephen Chong
chong at seas.harvard.edu
Mon Apr 8 18:02:10 EDT 2019
The submission deadline for SecDev 2019 has been extended to Monday
April 22 (with abstracts due Monday April 15). See below for details of
the Call for Papers and Tutorials.
- Monday April 15: Abstracts due
- Monday April 22: Submissions due
- Monday June 10: Author notification
# IEEE Secure Development Conference (SecDev) 2019 Call for Papers and
Tutorials
https://secdev.ieee.org/
*Sponsored by the IEEE Computer Society Technical Committee on Security
and Privacy*
*September 25-September 27, 2019 at the Hilton Tysons Corner, McLean,
VA, USA*
## Overview
SecDev is a venue for presenting ideas, research, and experience about
how to develop secure systems. It focuses on theory, techniques, and
tools to "build security in" to existing and new computing systems, and
does not focus on simply discovering the absence of security.
The goal of SecDev is to encourage and disseminate ideas for secure
system development among academia, industry, and government. It aims to
bridge the gap between constructive security research and practice and
to enable real-world impact of security research in the long run.
Developers have valuable experiences and ideas that can inform academic
research, and researchers have concepts, studies, and even code and
tools that could benefit developers. Great SecDev contributions could
come from attendees of industrial conferences like AppSec and RSA; from
attendees of academic conferences like IEEE S&P, IEEE CSF, USENIX
Security, CCS, NDSS, PLDI, ICSE, FSE, ISSTA, SOUPS, HOST, and others;
and from newcomers.
Examples of topics that are in scope include: development libraries,
tools, or processes to produce systems resilient to certain attacks;
formal foundations that underpin a language, tool, or testing strategy
that improves security; techniques that drastically improve the
scalability of security solutions for practical deployment; and
experience, designs, or applications showing how to apply cryptographic
techniques effectively to secure systems.
We solicit **research papers, position papers, systematization of
knowledge papers**, and **"best practice" papers**. All submissions
should present novel results, provide novel perspectives and insights,
or present new evidence about existing insights or techniques.
SecDev also seeks **hands-on and interactive tutorials** on processes,
frameworks, languages, and tools for building security in. The goal is
to share knowledge on the art and science of secure systems development.
(SecDev also seeks posters and tool demos, and abstracts from
practitioners to share their practical experiences and challenges in
security development. Information on these solicitations are available
on the SecDev website https://secdev.ieee.org/.)
Areas of interest include (but are not limited to):
- Security-focused system designs (HW/SW/architecture)
- Tools and methodology for secure code development
- Risk management and testing strategies to improve security
- Security engineering processes, from requirements to maintenance
- Programming languages, development tools, and ecosystems supporting
security
- Static program analysis for software security
- Dynamic analysis and runtime approaches for software security
- Automation of programming, deployment, and maintenance tasks for
security
- Distributed systems design and implementation for security
- Privacy by design
- Human-centered design for systems security
- Formal verification and other high-assurance methods for security
- Code reviews, red teams, and other human-centered assurance
## Submission Details
The website for submissions is https://hotcrp.ctisl.gtri.gatech.edu/.
Submissions must use the two-column IEEE Proceedings style:
https://www.ieee.org/conferences/publishing/templates.html.
Submissions must be one of two categories:
- **Papers**, up to 12 pages, excluding references and well-marked
appendices. These must be well-argued and worthy of publication and
citation, on the topics above. Research papers must present new work,
evidence, or ideas. Position papers with exceptional visions will also
be considered. Also welcome are systematization of knowledge papers and
"best practice" papers, which should provide an integration and
clarification of ideas on an established, major research area, support
or challenge long-held beliefs in such an area with compelling evidence,
or present a convincing, comprehensive new taxonomy of some aspect of
secure development.
Authors of accepted papers will present their work at the conference
(likely in a 30-minute slot) and their papers will appear in the
conference's formal IEEE proceedings.
To improve the fairness of the reviewing process, SecDev will follow
a light-weight **double-blind reviewing** process. Submitted papers must
(a) omit any reference to the authors' names or the names of their
institutions, and (b) reference the authors' own related work in the
third person (e.g., not "We build on our previous work ..." but rather
"We build on the work of ..."). Nothing should be done in the name of
anonymity that weakens the submission or makes the job of reviewing the
paper more difficult (e.g., important background references should not
be omitted or anonymized). Please see the SecDev site for the [answers
to many common concerns](https://secdev.ieee.org/2019/double-blind-faq/)
about SecDev's double-blind reviewing process. When in doubt, contact
the program chairs.
- **Tutorial proposals**. Tutorials should aim to be either 90 minutes
or 180 minutes long. We strongly encourage tutorials to have hands-on
components and audience interactions. We do not recommend simply slide
presentations. Tutorial proposals should be 2 pages and cover (a) the
topic; (b) a summary of the tutorial format highlighting hands-on
aspects and possibly pointers to relevant materials; (c) the expected
audience and expected learning outcomes; (d) prior tutorials or talks on
similar topics by the authors (and audience size), if any. Accepted
tutorials may provide an abstract that will appear in the conference's
formal IEEE proceedings. Tutorials will occur on the first day of the
conference (Wednesday September 25). Note that if an accepted tutorial
requires special materials or environments for the hands-on
participation, we expect the authors to provide necessary preparation
instructions for the attendees.
Tutorial proposals do not need to be anonymized.
At least one author of each accepted paper and tutorial must attend the
conference and present the paper/tutorial. In the event of difficulty in
obtaining visas for travel, exceptions can be made and will be discussed
on a case-by-case basis.
We are devoted to seeking broad representation in the program, and may
take this into account when reviewing multiple submissions from the same
authors.
If you have any questions, please email secdev19-pc at ieee.org.
## Important Dates
- Abstracts due for Paper and tutorial submission: Monday April 15, 2019
(11:59 PM AoE, UTC-12)
- Paper and tutorial submission: Monday April 22, 2019 (11:59 PM AoE,
UTC-12)
- Paper and tutorial notification: Monday June 10, 2019
- Poster, Tool Demo, and Practitioners' Session Abstract submission:
Wednesday July 10, 2019 (11:59 PM AoE, UTC-12)
- Poster, Tool Demo, and Practitioners' Session Abstract notification:
Monday July 29, 2019
- Camera-ready versions of Papers and Abstracts: Monday August 12, 2019
- Conference: Wednesday September 25 to Friday September 27, 2019
## Organizers
* Program Chairs
- Stephen Chong (Harvard University)
- Nikhil Swamy (Microsoft Research)
* General Chairs
- Lee W. Lerner (GTRI CIPHER Lab)
- Yousef Iskander (Cisco)
* Program Committee
- Yasemin Acar (Leibniz University Hannover)
- Lennart Beringer (Princeton University)
- Nataliia Bielova (Inria)
- Nathan Dautenhahn (Rice University)
- Dan Geer (IQT)
- Ronghui Gu (Columbia University)
- Michael Hicks (University of Maryland)
- Catalin Hritcu (Inria Paris)
- Trent Jaeger (Penn State University)
- Limin Jia (Carnegie Mellon University)
- Christoph Kern (Google)
- Joe Kiniry (Galois)
- Shriram Krishnamurthi (Brown University)
- Stephen Magill (Galois)
- Morley Mao (University of Michigan)
- Toby Murray (University of Melbourne)
- Daniela Seabra Oliveira (University of Florida)
- Madhusudan Parthasarathy (University of Illinois at
Urbana-Champaign)
- Benjamin C. Pierce (University of Pennsylvania)
- Nadia Polikarpova (University of California, San Diego)
- Tamara Rezk (Inria)
- M Angela Sasse (Ruhr University Bochum)
- Patrick Schaumont (Virginia Tech)
- Fred B. Schneider (Cornell University)
- David Tarditi (Microsoft)
- Laurie Williams (North Carolina State University)
- Danfeng (Daphne) Yao (Virginia Tech)
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://LISTS.SEAS.UPENN.EDU/pipermail/types-announce/attachments/20190408/5b701056/attachment-0001.html>
More information about the Types-announce
mailing list