- From: <mwh@cs.umd.edu>
- Date: Tue, 13 Feb 2007 09:29:50 -0500
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ACM SIGPLAN Workshop on Programming Languages and Analysis for Security San Diego, California, June 14, 2007 Sponsored by ACM SIGPLAN with support from IBM Research Co-located with PLDI'07 as part of FCRC. http://www.cs.umd.edu/~mwh/PLAS07/index.html Submission Deadline: April 1, 2007 **Publication options changed since first CFP** Call For Papers PLAS aims to provide a forum for exploring and evaluating ideas on the use of PROGRAMMING LANGUAGE and PROGRAM ANALYSIS TECHNIQUES to improve the SECURITY of SOFTWARE SYSTEMS. Strongly encouraged are proposals of new, speculative ideas; evaluations of new or known techniques in practical settings; and discussions of emerging threats and important problems. The scope of PLAS includes, but is not limited to: * Language-based techniques for security * Verification of security properties in software * Automated introduction and/or verification of security enforcement mechanisms * Program analysis techniques for discovering security vulnerabilities * Compiler-based security mechanisms, such as host-based intrusion detection and in-line reference monitors * Specifying and enforcing security policies for information flow and access control * Model-driven approaches to security * Applications, examples, and implementations of these security techniques Important Dates Submissions due: April 1, 2007 Notification of acceptance: May 1, 2007 Final version due: May 21, 2007 Workshop meeting: June 14, 2007 Submission Guidelines We invite papers of two kinds: (1) Technical papers for long presentations during the workshop, and (2) papers for short presentations (10 minutes). Papers submitted for the long format should contain relatively mature content. Short format papers can also contain mature work, but may present more preliminary work, position statements, or work that is more exploratory in nature. Long papers will appear in a formal proceedings. Short papers fall into two categories: formal short papers to appear in the proceedings, and informal short papers that will not; authors choose the category at the time of submission. The idea is to allow prospective participants to talk about less mature work that is not yet ready for formal publication. Papers to appear in the proceedings must describe work unpublished in refereed venues, and not submitted for publication elsewhere (including journals and formal proceedings of conferences and workshops). See the SIGPLAN republication policy for more details http://www.acm.org/sigs/sigplan/republicationpolicy.htm. The proceedings will be made available to the participants at the workshop, and its papers will be available in the ACM Digital Library. A CD containing the proceedings will made available to the participants after the meeting (due to publication time constraints due to affiliation with FCRC). Informal short presentations will have their abstracts included in the final proceedings, and may include previously-published material (which should be cited in the submission). Informal short presentations are not precluded for future publication at other conference venues or journals. Authors must indicate that they do not intend their paper to appear in the proceedings by prepending "Informal Presentation:" to the title of the submitted paper. Submitted papers must be formatted according the ACM proceedings format: long submissions should not exceed 12 pages in this format; short submissions should not exceed 6 pages. These page limits include everything (i.e., they are the total length of the paper). Papers submitted for the long category may be accepted as short presentations at the program committee's discretion. Submissions should be in PDF (preferably) or Postscript that is interpretable by Ghostscript and printable on US Letter and A4 sized paper. Templates for SIGPLAN-approved LaTeX format can be found at http://www.acm.org/sigs/sigplan/authorInformation.htm. We recommend using this format, which improves greatly on the ACM LaTeX format. Program Committee Michael Hicks, University of Maryland, College Park (Chair) Martin Abadi, Microsoft Research and University of California, Santa Cruz Steve Chong, Cornell University Adriana Compagnoni, Stevens Institute of Technology Jeff Foster, University of Maryland, College Park K. Rustan M. Leino, Microsoft Research, Redmond Marco Pistoia, IBM T. J. Watson Research Center Andrei Sabelfeld, Chalmers University of Technology Dawn Xiaodong Song, Carnegie-Mellon University Eijiro Sumii, Tohoku University Jan Vitek, Purdue University David Walker, Princeton University Xialolan (Catherine) Zhang, IBM T. J. Watson Research Center
Received on Tuesday, 13 February 2007 14:30:12 UTC