CALL FOR PAPERS
2006 IEEE Symposium on Security and Privacy
May 21-24, 2006
The Claremont Resort
Berkeley/Oakland, California, USA

Sponsored by
IEEE Computer Society Technical Committee on Security and Privacy
In cooperation with
The International Association for Cryptologic Research (IACR)

Symposium Committee:
General Chair: Hilarie Orman (Purple Streak, Inc., USA)
Vice Chair: Deborah Shands (The Aerospace Corporation, USA)
Treasurer: Terry Benzel (ISI/USC, USA)

Program Co-Chairs: Vern Paxson (ICSI and LBNL, USA), 
                   Birgit Pfitzmann (IBM Zurich Research Lab, Switzerland)
Workshop Local Arrangements Chair: Doug Tygar (UC Berkeley, USA)
5-Minute Talks Co-Chairs: 
      Hervé Debar (France Telecom R\amp;D, France)
      Philippe Golle (Palo Alto Research Center, 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Previously unpublished papers offering novel research contributions in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 2006 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.

New This Year: The 2006 Symposium is open to submissions not only of
full-length papers but also short papers (extended abstracts)
describing less mature work. See below for details.

Topics of interest include, but are not limited to, the following:
Access Control and Audit
Anonymity and Pseudonymity
Authentication, including Phishing
Automated and Large-Scale Attacks
Biometrics
Commercial and Industrial Security
Data Integrity
Database Security
Denial of Service
Distributed Systems Security
Electronic Privacy
	Information Flow
Intrusion Detection
Language-Based Security
Malicious Code
Mobile Code and Agent Security
Network Security
Peer-to-Peer Security
Secure Hardware and Smartcards
Security Protocols
Security Verification
Security of Mobile Ad-Hoc Networks

Program Committee:
Paul Ammann, George Mason University, USA
Tuomas Aura, Microsoft Research, UK
Michael Backes, IBM Research, Switzerland
Elisa Bertino, Purdue University, USA
Peter Chen, University of Michigan, USA
Robert Cunningham, MIT Lincoln Laboratory, USA
George Danezis, Cambridge University, UK
Drew Dean, SRI International, USA
Hervé Debar, France Telecom R\amp;D, France
Nick Feamster, Georgia Tech, USA
Kevin Fu, University of Massachusetts Amherst, USA
Philippe Golle, Palo Alto Research Center, USA
Steven Gribble, University of Washington, USA
Richard Kemmerer, UC Santa Barbara, USA
Angelos Keromytis, Columbia University, USA
Christopher Kruegel, Technical University Vienna, Austria
Michiharu Kudo, IBM Research, Japan
	Helmut Kurth, Atsec Information Security, Germany
Ralf Küsters, University of Kiel, Germany
Susan Landau, Sun Microsystems, USA
Carl Landwehr, University of Maryland, USA
Marc Langheinrich, ETH Zurich, CH
Ludovic Mé, Supélec, France
Adrian Perrig, Carnegie Mellon University, USA
Michaël Rusinowitch, INRIA Lorraine, France
Andrei Sabelfeld, Chalmers University, Sweden
Stefan Savage, UC San Diego, USA
Sean Smith, Dartmouth College, USA
Sal Stolfo, Columbia University, USA
Doug Tygar, UC Berkeley, USA
Paul van Oorschot, Carleton University, Canada
David Wagner, UC Berkeley, USA
Helen Wang, Microsoft Research, USA
Rebecca Wright, Stevens Institute of Technology, USA
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. Failure to clearly document
such overlap will lead to automatic rejection. If authors have any
doubts regarding whether such overlap exists, 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 in length (6 pages for extended abstracts), excluding the
bibliography and well-marked appendices; note, 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.

Please submit papers via the Web; the submission address will be
published 2 weeks before the deadline.

For regular-length papers, the situation may arise that the program
committee decides to not accept the paper, but concludes that an
extended-abstract 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 extended abstracts will generally be
shepherded.

For any questions, contact the program chairs at oak6-pc-chairs@icir.org
Paper submissions due: November 4, 2005, 23:00:00 PST (GMT-8)  
    (No extensions!)
Acceptance notification: January 27, 2006
Final papers due: March 3rd, 2006

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.

EXTENDED ABSTRACTS

This year the symposium is open to submission of short papers in
addition to regular full-length papers. The intent behind these
extended abstracts is to expand the program to include less mature
work, and therefore the novelty and longer-term promise of such
submissions will weigh more heavily in the reviewing process than
their degree of high polish. Extended abstracts accepted for the
program will appear in the proceedings (in short form - not expanded
to full papers - and with Extended Abstract in the title) and be
presented orally during the symposium (in suitably shorter speaking
slots) as a regular part of the program. Extended abstract submissions
must not exceed 6 pages for the main text (other than bibliography and
appendices).  PANEL PROPOSALS

The conference may include panel sessions addressing topics of
interest to the computer security community. Proposals for panels
should include possible panelists and an indication of which of those
panelists have confirmed participation. Please submit panel proposals
by email to oak6-pc-chairs@icir.org
Panel proposals due: January 2, 2006, 23:00:00 PST (GMT-8)
Acceptance notification: January 27, 2006

CO-LOCATING WORKSHOPS

Also new this year, we are encouraging submissions of workshops to be
co-located with IEEE S\amp;P 2006. To submit a workshop proposal, send a
note to oak6-pc-chairs@icir.org outlining the theme, proposed program
committee, reviewing process, and dates. For accepted workshops, the
workshop local arrangements chair will be able to provide logistical
assistance.

5-MINUTE TALKS

A continuing feature of the symposium is a session of 5-minute talks
where attendees can present preliminary research results or summaries
of works published elsewhere. Abstracts for 5-minute talks must fit on
one 8.5"x11" or A4 page, including the title and all author names and
affiliations. Submit abstracts by email to oak6-wip-chairs@icir.org.

5-minute abstracts due: May 22, 2006, 18:00:00 PDT (at the conference)
Acceptance notification: May 23, 2006, 10:30:00 PDT

Note: while the majority of these presentations will be accepted and
notified per the above dates, we will also review and accept a small
number of presentations prior to the meeting, with an early decision,
for those who require a decision in order to plan their travel. Such
submissions must be sent by April 10, 2006, with early notifications
to be made by April 17, 2006