--- begin forwarded text To: fc-announce@ifca.ai From: Avi Rubin <rubin@jhu.edu> Subject: [fc-announce] CFP FC'06: Financial Cryptography and Data Security Sender: fc-announce-admin@ifca.ai Date: Tue, 2 Aug 2005 13:58:29 -0400 <x-flowed> Call for Papers FC'06: Financial Cryptography and Data Security http://fc06.ifca.ai/ Tenth International Conference February 27 to March 2, 2006 Anguilla, British West Indies Submissions Due Date: October 17, 2005 Program Chairs: Giovanni Di Crescenzo (Telcordia) Avi Rubin (Johns Hopkins University) General Chair: Patrick McDaniel (Penn State University) Local Arrangements Chair: Rafael Hirschfeld (Unipay Technologies) At its 10th year edition, Financial Cryptography and Data Security (FC'06) is a well established and major international forum for research, advanced development, education, exploration, and debate regarding security in the context of finance and commerce. We will continue last year's augmentation of the conference title and expansion of our scope to cover all aspects of securing transactions and systems. These aspects include a range of technical areas such as: cryptography, payment systems, secure transaction architectures, software systems and tools, user and operator interfaces, fraud prevention, secure IT infrastructure, and analysis methodologies. Our focus will also encompass financial, legal, business and policy aspects. Material both on theoretical (fundamental) aspects of securing systems, on secure applications and real-world deployments will be considered. The conference goal is to bring together top cryptographers, data-security specialists, and scientists with economists, bankers, implementers, and policy makers. Intimate and colorful by tradition, the FC'06 program will feature invited talks, academic presentations, technical demonstrations, and panel discussions. In addition, we will celebrate this 10th year edition with a number of initiatives, such as: especially focused session, technical and historical state-of-the-art panels, and one session of surveys. This conference is organized annually by the International Financial Cryptography Association (IFCA). Original papers, surveys and presentations on all aspects of financial and commerce security are invited. Submissions must have a visible bearing on financial and commerce security issues, but can be interdisciplinary in nature and need not be exclusively concerned with cryptography or security. Possible topics for submission to the various sessions include, but are not limited to: Anonymity and Privacy Microfinance and Auctions Micropayments Audit and Auditability Monitoring, Management and Authentication and Operations Identification, including Reputation Systems Biometrics RFID-Based and Contactless Certification and Payment Systems Authorization Risk Assessment and Commercial Cryptographic Management Applications Secure Banking and Financial Commercial Transactions and Web Services Contracts Securing Emerging Digital Cash and Payment Computational Paradigms Systems Security and Risk Digital Incentive and Perceptions and Judgments Loyalty Systems Security Economics Digital Rights Management Smart Cards and Secure Financial Regulation and Tokens Reporting Trust Management Fraud Detection Trustability and Game Theoretic Approaches to Trustworthiness Security Underground-Market Economics Identity Theft, Physhing and Usability and Acceptance of Social Engineering Security Systems Infrastructure Design User and Operator Interfaces Legal and Regulatory Issues Voting system security Submission Instructions Submission Categories FC'06 is inviting submissions in four categories: (1) research papers, (2) systems and applications presentations, (3) panel sessions, (4) surveys. For all accepted submissions, at least one author must attend the conference and present the work. Research Papers Research papers should describe novel scientific contributions to the field, and they will be subject to rigorous peer review. Papers can be a maximum of 15 pages in length (including references and appendices), and accepted submissions will be published in full in the conference proceedings. Systems and Application Presentations Submissions in this category should describe novel or successful systems with an emphasis on secure digital commerce applications. Presentations may concern commercial systems, academic prototypes, or open-source projects for any of the topics listed above. Where appropriate, software or hardware demonstrations are encouraged as part of the presentations in these sessions. Submissions in this category should consist of a short summary of the work (1-6 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 (25 minutes per presentation), and a one-page abstract will be published in the conference proceedings. Panel Sessions Proposals for panel sessions are also solicited, and should include a brief description of the panel as well as prospective participants. Accepted panel sessions will be presented at the conference, and each participant will contribute a one-page abstract to be published in the conference proceedings. Surveys A limited number of surveys presentations may also be included in the program. We encourage submissions that summarize the current state of the art on any well-defined subset of the above listed submission topics. A limited description of visions on future directions of research in these topics would also be appreciated. Survey submissions can be significantly shorter than research paper submissions. Preparation Instructions Submissions to the research papers, systems/application presentation categories and surveys must be received by the due date. Papers must be formatted in standard PostScript, PDF format, or MS Word. Submissions in other formats will be rejected. All papers must be submitted electronically according to the instructions and forms found on this web site and at the submission site. Authors should provide names and affiliations at submission time, and have the option of including or not names and affiliations in their submitted papers, that must include on their first page the title of the paper, the a brief abstract, and a list of topical keywords. Accepted submissions will be included in the conference proceedings to be published in the Springer-Verlag Lecture Notes in Computer Science (LNCS) series after the conference, so the submissions must be formatted in the standard LNCS format (15 page limit). Authors of accepted submissions will be required to complete and sign an IFCA copyright form. A pre-proceedings volume containing preliminary versions of the papers will be distributed at the conference. Questions about all conference submissions should be directed to the Program Chairs. Paper Submission Authors should only submit work that does not substantially overlap with work that is currently submitted or has been accepted for publication to a conference with proceedings or a journal. Please check back as the deadline approaches for a link to the submission server. The Rump Session FC'06 will also include the popular "rump session" held on one of the evenings in an informal, social atmosphere. The rump session is a program of short (5-7 minute), informal presentations on works in progress, off-the-cuff ideas, and any other matters pertinent to the conference. Any conference attendee is welcome to submit a presentation to the Rump Session Chair (to be announced). This submission should consist of a talk title, the name of the presenter, and, if desired, a very brief abstract. Submissions may be sent via e-mail, or submitted in person through the Monday of the conference. Program Committee Matt Blaze, University of Pennsylvania Alfredo De Santis, University of Salerno, Italy Sven Dietrich, CERT Research Center Juan Garay, Bell Labs Dan Geer, Verdasys Ari Juels, RSA Aggelos Kiayias, University of Connecticut Yoshi Kohno, University of California San Diego Arjen Lenstra, Bell Labs and Technische Universiteit Eindhoven Helger Lipmaa, Cybernetica AS and University of Tartu Steve Myers, Indiana University Andrew Odlyzko, University of Minnesota Tatsuaki Okamoto, NTT Carles Padro, Universitat Politecnica de Catalunya Andrew Patrick, NRC, Canada Ahmad-Reza Sadeghi, Ruhr-University Bochum Kazue Sako, NEC Dawn Song, CMU Stuart Stubblebine, University of California Davis & Stubblebine Labs Adam Stubblefield, Independent Security Evaluators Paul Syverson, NRL Mike Szydlo, RSA Gene Tsudik, University of California Irvine Doug Tygar, Berkeley University Alma Whitten, Google Yacov Yacobi, Microsoft Research Moti Yung, RSA & Columbia University Yuliang Zheng, University of North Carolina Important Dates: Paper Submission: October 17, 2005 Notification: December 8th, 2005 Pre-Proceedings: January 27th, 2005 Conference dates: February 27 to March 2, 2006 Post Proceedings: April 10, 2006 ************************************************** Avi Rubin Professor, Computer Science Technical Director, Information Security Institute Johns Hopkins University rubin@jhu.edu 410-516-8177 (Voice) 443-264-2406 (Fax) http://www.cs.jhu.edu/~rubin/ ************************************************** _______________________________________________ fc-announce mailing list fc-announce@ifca.ai http://mail.ifca.ai/mailman/listinfo/fc-announce </x-flowed> --- end forwarded text -- ----------------- R. 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