Third
Workshop on
Intelligent Security
(Security and Artificial Intelligence)
SecArt '11
Call for Papers
Our increasingly networked world continues to provide new opportunities for
security breaches that have severe
consequences at the personal level
(identity theft, and resulting financial
losses), for businesses (theft of
intellectual property, or business plans,
or costly responses to the theft of
customer data), and for governments.
Computing and the internet have become
crucial parts of the infrastructure of
almost every significant commercial or
governmental enterprise. Turning off the
computers or disconnecting from the
network has become tantamount to turning
off the power.
The use of techniques drawn from AI is increasingly relevant as the scale of
the problem increases, in terms of the
size and complexity of the networks being
protected, the variety of applications
and services provided using that
infrastructure, and the sophistication of
the attacks being made. With this
workshop, we hope to encourage dialogue
and collaboration between the AI and
Security communities. Further, we hope
that this will foster a continuing
interaction. Previous workshops in this
area include the ICAPS-09 and AAAI-10
workshops on
Intelligent Security, as well as three
workshops held in conjunction with the
ACM Conference on Computer and
Communications Security (CCS), in 2008,
2009, and 2010.
Topics of interest for this workshop include, but are not limited to, the
following:
- Knowledge Representation and Engineering for Cyber Security
- Secure Web Services
- Development of Trusted Software
- Data Mining and Forensics
- Data Mining Malware
- Automated Vulnerability Analysis
- Automated Exploit and Attack Generation
- Automated Alerting and Response
- Diagnosis and Plan Recognition
- Automating Security Analyses and Audits
- Artificial Immune Systems
- Privacy and Confidentiality
- Intelligent User Interfaces for Security Applications
- Security and Organizational Structure
The emphasis for this one-day workshop will be on discussion and interaction
among the workshop participants, grounded
in and motivated by a limited number of
presentations drawn from full paper
submissions, as well as an invited
speaker.
Submissions:
Please use
Easy Chair Login Page
for submitting your paper.
We will accept either full papers for presentation
or position papers outlining the
author's background, interests, and
suggested topics for or contributions to
the workshop. All submissions should be
preferably in PDF format according to
AAAI's style.
For *submissions* of full papers the max. length is 8, while for *publication* of
accepted papers, it will be between
6 and 8, depending on the number of
papers accepted. The max. length of
position/short papers is 2 pages.
Important Dates
- Deadline for submissions: April 4, 2011
- Notification: May 9, 2011
- Camera-ready paper due: May 23, 2011
- Workshop: July 18, 2011
Programme Committee
-
Bob Balzer (Teknowledge, US)
-
Chris Geib (University of Edinburgh, GB)
-
Robert P. Goldman (SIFT, US)
-
Alessio Lomuscio (Imperial College London, GB)
-
Norbert Pohlmann (Internet-Sicherheit, Germany)
-
Anil Somayaji (Carleton University, CA)
-
Tim Strayer (BBN Technologies, US)
-
Dan Thomsen (SIFT, US)
-
Frederic Cuppens (Telecom Bretagne, France)
-
Joerg Hoffmann (INRIA Nancy, France)
-
Thorsten Holz (Ruhr-University Bochum, Germany)
-
Rachel Greenstadt (Drexel University, US)
-
Karsten Sohr (University of Bremen, Germany)
Workshop Chairs:
Mark Boddy
Adventium Labs
111 Third Avenue South, Suite 100
Minneapolis, MN 55401, USA
Email: mark.boddy@adventiumlabs.org
Stefan Edelkamp
Technologie-Zentrum Informatik
Am Fallturm 1, Raum 2.62
28357 Universität Bremen, Germany
Email: edelkamp@tzi.de
Yacine Zemali
ENSI de Bourges
LIFO - EA 4022
88 Boulevard Lahitolle
18020 Bourges Cedex, France
Email: yacine.zemali@ensi-bourges.fr
Support:
Squis