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    November 05

    一些计算机会议排名及论文录取率 [转载]

    1.网络相关的会议论文录取率及排名
    http://www.cs.ucsb.edu/~almeroth/conf/stats/

    2.计算机安全相关的会议论文录取率及排名
    http://www-static.cc.gatech.edu/~guofei/sec_conf_stat.htm

    3.新加坡国立大学计算机系做的一个全球大学计算机系的排名
    http://www.comp.nus.edu.sg/~tankl/bench.html

    4.Git的一个计算机会议排名
    http://www-static.cc.gatech.edu/~guofei/CS_ConfRank.htm#sys

    5.软件工程相关会议论文录取率及排名
    http://www.csc.ncsu.edu/faculty/xie/seconferences.htm

    6.数据库相关会议论文录取率及排名
    http://wwwhome.cs.utwente.nl/~apers/rates.html

    7.CG及视觉相关会议论文录取率及排名
    http://vrlab.epfl.ch/~ulicny/statistics/
     
     
    October 16

    CCICS-2007-20070205-PROC-HuNan-CFP

    第五届中国信息和通信安全学术会议(CCICS’2007)
        第五届中国信息和通信安全学术会议(CCICS’2007)拟定于2007年6月15日在湖南大学举行。会议论文集拟将由科学出版社出版。会议还将向《计算机学报》和《软件学报》推荐优秀论文。
        会议网站:http://scsc.hnu.cn/newweb/communion/ccics/

    1、征文范围
        会议重点征集信息与通信安全的理论和技术方面的研究论文。具体包括(不限于):
    • 网络与通信安全:可信网络,网络攻防,网络安全管理,网络安全免疫,网络容侵, 通信安全,无线通信网络安全,计算机病毒技术;
    • 密码学:密码学的理论与技术,新型密码,密码技术应用;
    • 信息隐藏:信息隐藏,数字水印,数字版权管理;
    • 信息安全应用:电子政务安全,电子商务安全,信息安全管理。
    2、征文要求
    • 论文须为未公开发表过,一般不超过 6000 字;
    • 论文包括中英文题目,作者姓名、单位、地址、邮编、 E-mail 地址、联系电话,中英文摘要(一般不超过 200 字)、关键词、正文和参考文献;
    •  论文请用 Word 排版, A4 纸打印,一式两份,欢迎通过会议网站在线投或通过 EMAIL 投稿;
    • 征文请寄:湖南省长沙市湖南大学软件学院 谢冬青 收 邮政编码: 410082 ,电子版投稿请送: ccics07@hotmail.com
    3、重要日期
        论文提交截止日期——2007年2月5日
        论文录用通知发出日期——2007年3月15日(书面和网络通知)
        论文正式提交日期——2007年4月10日

    注:委员会主席为 冯登国
    October 09

    ARES-2007-20061110-IEEE-Vienna -CFP

     

    CALL FOR PAPERS

    The Second International Conference on Availability, Reliability and Security (ARes)
    ARES 2007 - "The International Security and Dependability Conference"

    April 10th - April 13th, 2007
    http://www.ares-conference.eu/conf/

    Conference

    The Second International Conference on Availability, Reliability and Security (“ARES 2007 – The International Security and Dependability Conference”) will bring together researchers and practitioners in the area of IT-Security and Dependability. ARES 2007 will highlight the various aspects of security – with special focus on secure internet solutions, trusted computing, digital forensics, privacy and organizational security issues.
    ARES 2007 aims at a full and detailed discussion of the research issues of security as an
    integrative concept that covers amongst others availability, safety, confidentiality, integrity,
    maintainability and security in the different fields of applications.

     

    Important Dates

    • Workshop Proposal: September, 10th 2006
    • Submission Deadline: November, 19th 2006
    • Author Notification: January, 7th 2007
    • Author Registration: January, 21st 2007
    • Proceedings Version: January, 21st 2007
    • Conference: April, 10th to April 13th, 2007

     

    Workshop Proposal

    In conjunction with the ARES 2007 conference, a number of workshops will be organized. Workshop proposals should include the call for papers, the number of papers to be accepted, the contact person, etc. They are to be sent to the Workshop Organizing Committee Dr. Nguyen Manh Tho ( tho@ifs.tuwien.ac.at This email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it ) by September 10th 2006. Proceedings of the ARES 2007 workshops will be published by IEEE Computer Society Press.

     

    Topics of interest include, but are not limited to:

    • Process based Security Models andMethods
    • Authorization and Authentication
    • Availability and Reliability
    • Common Criteria Protocol
    • Cost/Benefit Analysis
    • Cryptographic protocols
    • Dependability Aspects for Special Applications (e.g. ERP-Systems, Logistics)
    • Dependability Aspects of Electronic Government (e-Government)
    • Dependability administration
    • Dependability in Open Source Software
    • Designing Business Models with security requirements
    • Digital Forensics
    • E-Commerce Dependability
    • Failure Prevention
    • IPR of Security Technology
    • Incident Response and Prevention
    • Information Flow Control
    • Internet Dependability
    • Interoperability aspects
    • Intrusion Detection and Fraud Detection
    • Legal issues
    • Mobile Security
    • Network Security
    • Privacy-enhancing technologies
    • RFID Security and Privacy
    • Risk planning, analysis & awareness
    • Safety Critical Systems
    • Secure Enterprise Architectures
    • Security Issues for Ubiquitous Systems
    • Security and Privacy in E-Health
    • Security and Trust Management in P2P and Grid applications
    • Security and privacy issues for sensor networks, wireless/mobile devices and applications
    • Security as Quality of Service
    • Security in Distributed Systems / Distributed Databases
    • Security in Electronic Payments
    • Security in Electronic Voting
    • Software Engineering of Dependable Systems
    • Software Security
    • Standards, Guidelines and Certification
    • Survivability of Computing Systems
    • Temporal Aspects of Dependability
    • Trusted Computing
    • Tools for Dependable System Design and Evaluation
    • Trust Models and Trust Management
    • VOIP/Wireless Security

     

    Submission Guidelines

    Authors are invited to submit research and application papers following the IEEE Computer Society Proceedings Manuscripts style: two columns, single-spaced, including figures and
    references, using 10 fonts, and number each page. You can confirm the IEEE Computer Society Proceedings Author Guidelines at the following web page:

    http://computer.org/cspress/instruct.htm

    SP-2007-20061110-IEEE-USA-CFP

    CALL FOR PAPERS

    2007 IEEE Symposium on
    Security and Privacy

    May 20-23, 2007
    The Claremont Resort, Berkeley/Oakland, California, USA

    Since 1980, the IEEE Symposium on Security and Privacy has been the premier forum for the presentation of developments in computer security and electronic privacy, and for bringing together researchers and practitioners in the field.

    Previously unpublished papers offering novel research contributions in any aspect of computer security or electronic privacy are solicited for submission to the 2007 symposium. Papers may represent advances in the theory, design, implementation, analysis, or empirical evaluation of secure systems, either for general use or for specific application domains.

    The 2007 Symposium is open to submissions not only of full-length papers but also short papers (extended abstracts) describing less mature work. It is also open to the submission of co-located half-day or one-day workshops. See below for these and other program elements.

    Topics of interest include, but are not limited to, the following:

    Access control and audit
    Anonymity and pseudonymity
    Application-level security
    Biometrics
    Cryptographic protocols
    Database security
    Denial of service
    Distributed systems security

    Formal methods for security
    Information flow
    Intrusion detection and prevention
    Language-based security
    Malicious code prevention
    Network security
    Operating system security

    Peer-to-peer security
    Privacy
    Risk analysis
    Secure hardware and smartcards
    Security engineering
    Security policy
    User authentication

    INSTRUCTIONS FOR PAPER SUBMISSIONS

    All submissions MUST reflect original work and MUST adequately document any overlap with previously published or simultaneously submitted papers from any of the authors. Especially, simultaneous submission of the same paper to another conference with proceedings or a journal is not allowed. Failure to clearly document such overlaps will lead to automatic rejection. If authors have any doubts regarding such overlaps, they should contact the program chairs prior to submission.
    Papers should be submitted in Portable Document Format (.pdf) using an 11-point font, single column layout, standard interline spacing, and reasonable margins. Regular full-length papers must not exceed 15 pages -- short papers 6 pages --, excluding the bibliography and well-marked appendices. Committee members are not required to read the appendices, so papers must be intelligible without them.
    We request that submissions be in US letter paper size (not A4) if possible. We urge authors to follow the NSF "Fastlane" guidelines for document preparation (https://www.fastlane.nsf.gov/documents/pdf_create/pdfcreate_05.jsp), and to pay special attention to unusual fonts.
    Papers should be submitted in a form suitable for anonymous review: remove author names and affiliations from the title page, and avoid explicit self-referencing in the text. When referring to your previous work, do so in the third person, as though it were written by someone else. Only blind the reference itself if a third-person reference will clearly not work.
    For regular-length papers, the situation may arise that the program committee decides to not accept the paper, but concludes that a short version of the paper would be acceptable. Authors of regular papers must explicitly indicate upon submission whether they wish their submission to be considered for this form of alternate acceptance. There is no penalty for authors deciding either way. Regular papers accepted as short papers will generally be shepherded.
    For any questions, contact the program chairs at oakland07-pchairs@ieee-security.org.

    Paper submissions due: November 10, 2006, 23:59:00 PST (GMT-8).    (No extensions!)
    Acceptance notification: January 29, 2007.
    Final papers due: March 2nd, 2007.

    Submissions received after the submission deadline or failing to conform to the guidelines above risk rejection without consideration of their merits. Authors are responsible for obtaining appropriate clearances; authors of accepted papers will be asked to sign IEEE copyright release forms. Where possible all further communications to authors will be via email.

     

    EUROCRYPT-2007-20061107-LNCS-SPAIN-CFP

    Eurocrypt 2007

    http://www.iacr.org/conferences/eurocrypt2007/cfp.html 

    May 20-24, 2007, Barcelona, Spain

    Submission: November 7, 2006 Notification: February 7, 2007 Final Version: March 7, 2007

    General Information

    Original papers on all technical aspects of cryptology are solicited for submission to Eurocrypt 2007, the 26th Annual Eurocrypt Conference. Eurocrypt 2007 is organized by the International Association for Cryptologic Research (IACR). For more information see www.iacr.org.

    Instructions for Authors

    Submissions must not substantially duplicate work that any of the authors has published elsewhere or has submitted in parallel to any other conference or workshop with proceedings. IACR reserves the right to share information about submissions with other Program Committees. Accepted submissions may not appear in any other conference or workshop that has proceedings.

    Submission Format:
    • Anonymity: the submission is not required to be anonymous, but authors may choose to anonymize their paper.
    • The length of the submission should be at most 12 pages excluding bibliography and appendices. It should be in single column format, use at least 11-point fonts, and have reasonable margins.
    • The submission should begin with a title, a short abstract, and a list of keywords. The introduction should summarize the contributions of the paper at a level appropriate for a non-specialist reader. Committee members are not expected to read appendices; the paper should be intelligible without them.
    • Papers must be submitted electronically by Nov 7, 2006, 19:00 UTC. Late submissions and non-electronic submissions (including faxes) will not be considered.
    • Submissions should preferably be in PDF format, although PostScript will be allowed. If at all possible, the submission should be in US letter paper size (rather than A4), and should use Type 1 fonts (rather than Type 3 fonts). Please follow this link for instructions and tips on preparing your submission file.

    Notification of acceptance or rejection will be sent to authors by February 7, 2007. Authors of accepted papers must guarantee that their paper will be presented at the conference.

    Conference Proceedings

    Proceedings will be published in Springer's Lecture Notes in Computer Science and will be available at the conference. Instructions about the preparation of a final proceedings version will be sent to the authors of accepted papers. The final versions of the accepted papers will be due on March 7, 2006.

     

    USEC-2007-20061105-Proceeding-Lowlands-CFP

    First Call for Papers

    Usable Security (USEC'07)

    http://www.usablesecurity.org/

    February 15-16, 2007
    Lowlands, Scarborough, Trinidad/Tobago

    A workshop co-located with
    The Eleventh Conference on Financial Cryptography and Data Security (FC'07)


    Submissions Due Date: November 5, 2006, 11:59pm, PST

    Some of the most challenging problems in designing and maintaining secure systems involve human factors. A great deal remains to be understood about users' capabilities and motivations to perform security tasks. Usability problems have been at the root of many widely reported security failures in high-stakes financial, commercial and voting applications.

    USEC'07 seeks submissions of novel research from academia and industry on all theoretical and practical aspects of usable security in the context of finance and commerce. The workshop will bring together an interdisciplinary group of researchers and practitioners, allowing experts in human-computer interaction, cryptography, data security and public policy to explore emerging problems and solutions.

    Program Chair: Rachna Dhamija, Harvard University

    Program Committee (not complete):
    Steven Bellovin, Columbia University
    Dan Boneh, Stanford University
    Simson Garfinkel, Harvard University
    Raquel Hill, Indiana University
    Jason Hong, Carnegie Mellon University
    Burt Kaliski, RSA Security and RSA Laboratories
    Robert Miller, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
    Andrew Patrick, National Research Council Canada
    Angela Sasse, University College London
    Dan Schutzer, Financial Services Technology Consortium
    Sean Smith, Dartmouth College
    J. D. Tygar, U.C. Berkeley
    Paul van Oorschot, Carleton University
    Ka-Ping Yee, U.C. Berkeley

    General Chair: Stuart Schechter, MIT Lincoln Laboratory


    Submission Categories

    USEC'07 invites submissions in three categories: (1) research papers, (2) abstracts and demos, and (3) working sessions. For all accepted submissions, at least one author must attend the conference and present the work.

    Research Papers

    Submitted papers must not substantially overlap with papers that have been published or that are simultaneously submitted to a journal or a conference with proceedings. Research paper submissions should be at most 12 pages, excluding bibliography and appendices (appendices may include usability study materials and data).

    Accepted submissions will appear both in a pre-proceedings, available at the workshop, and in a formal proceedings. After receiving feedback from the workshop, authors will have the opportunity to revise their papers before submitting a camera-ready draft for the final proceedings.

    Abstracts and Demos

    Submissions in this category should consist of a short summary of work (1-3 pages in length) to be reviewed by the Program Committee, along with a short biography of the presenters. Accepted submissions will be presented at the conference, and a one-page abstract will be published in the conference proceedings. Where appropriate, software or hardware demonstrations are encouraged as part of the presentations in these sessions.

    Working Sessions

    We are soliciting topics for working sessions at the intersection of usability, security, finance and commerce. Working sessions will explore topics in depth with significant paricipation from audience members. Proposals for working sessions should include the proposed topic, format (e.g., panel of invited experts, moderated discussion session, design exercises), prospective participants, time required and a plan for engaging participation from audience members.


    Paper Submission

    Paper submission will occur via a website to be announced at a later time.


    Important Dates:

    Paper Submission:   November 5, 2006
    Author Notification:   December 15, 2006
    Camera-ready for Pre-Proceedings:   January 31, 2007
    FC'07 Dates:   February 12-15, 2007
    USEC'07 Dates:   February 15-16, 2007
    Camera-ready for Final Proceedings:   March 15, 2007

    ITS-2008-20061031-IEEE-CFP

    Special Issue of IEEE Transactions on Information Theory on Information Theoretic Security
     

    Schedule:

    Submission Deadline: October 31, 2006

    Acceptance Notification: August 31, 2007

    Final version due: October 31, 2007

    Publication: March 2008

    A special issue of the IEEE Transactions on Information Theory will be devoted to the exciting research field of Information Theoretic Security. Cryptographic systems that are currently employed in practice are predominantly based on unproven mathematical assumptions such as the assumed infeasibility of factoring large integers and finding discrete logarithms over large finite fields. Advances in cryptanalytic attack algorithms and new computing technologies such as quantum computers may eventually render these systems insecure and obsolete in the future. As such among both information security researchers and practitioners there has long been a sense of urgency to investigate novel encryption and authentication systems that do not rely for their security on unproven mathematical assumptions. The past two decades have witnessed a number of significant developments in information theoretic security, including the discovery of unconditionally secure encryption schemes, authentication codes and signature methods, and the development of quantum key distribution protocols.


    This special issue will focus on research efforts in all major areas in Information Theoretic Security including encryption, authentication, signature, key distributions, information sharing and quantum cryptography. High quality research papers, expository articles, survey papers, and correspondence items pertaining to all aspects of Information Theoretic Security are solicited. Specific topics include, but are not limited to, the following:

    • Theoretical and practical topics concerning information theoretic security
    • Paradigms, approaches and techniques concerning information theoretic security
    • Information theory applicable to information security
    • Applications of information theory to computational security
    • Topics in the bounded storage model and the noisy channel model
    • Quantum information theory applicable to information security
    • Quantum cryptography

    Further information on guidelines and instructions for submissions can be found at the following web site:

    http://www.isac.uncc.edu/ITS-special-issue

     

    ISPEC-2007-20061101-LNCS-HK-CFP

    The 3rd Information Security Practice and Experience Conference (ISPEC 2007)
    7 - 10 May 2007, Hong Kong, China
    http://www.cs.cityu.edu.hk/~ispec2007
     
    This third conference ISPEC 2007 will be held in Hong Kong, China, May 7 - 10, 2007. Again, we plan to publish the conference proceedings in a volume of Springer LNCS.

    Important Dates:

    Submission Due: November 1, 2006
    Acceptance Notification: January 10, 2007
    Camera-ready Copy Due: January 31, 2007

     
    TOPICS:

    Authors are invited to submit full papers presenting new research results related to information security technologies and applications. All submissions must describe original research that is not published or currently under review by another conference or journal. Areas of interest include, but are not limited to:

    • Applications of cryptography
    • Critical infrastructure protection
    • Digital rights management
    • Economic incentives for deployment of information security systems
    • Information security in vertical applications
    • Legal and regulatory issues
    • Privacy and anonymity
    • Risk evaluation and security certification
    • Resilience and availability
    • Secure system architectures
    • Security policy
    • Security standards activities
    • Trust model and management
    • Usability aspects of information security systems