eCrime Summit

October 15-16, 2008
Atlanta, GA

Call for Papers
 
Registration
 

eCrime '08
eCrime '07
eCrime '06


Program Sponsors





The third APWG eCrime Researchers Summit will be hosted in October 15-16, 2008, in Atlanta, GA.

Original papers on all aspects of electronic crime are solicited for submission to eCrime '08. Topics of relevance include but are not limited to:

  • Phishing, pharming, click-fraud, crimeware, extortion and emerging attacks.
  • Technical, legal, political, social and psychological aspects of fraud and fraud prevention.
  • Techniques to assess the risks and yields of attacks and the success rates of countermeasures.
  • Delivery techniques, including spam, voice mail and rank manipulation; and countermeasures.
  • Spoofing of different types, and applications to fraud.
  • Techniques to avoid detection, tracking and takedown; and ways to block such techniques.
  • Honeypot design, data mining, and forensic aspects of fraud prevention.
  • Design and evaluation of user interfaces in the context of fraud and network security.
  • Best practices related to digital forensics tools and techniques, investigative procedures, and evidence acquisition, handling and preservation.

Accepted papers will appear in the ACM Digital Library as part of the ACM International Conference Proceedings Series. In addition, cash awards will be given for the best paper overall and the best student co-authored paper. A limited number of cash travel awards will also be made to student authors of papers and posters.

Instructions for Authors

Submissions must be anonymous, with no author names, affiliations, acknowledgments, or obvious references. Submissions should be in English, in PDF format with all fonts embedded, formatted using the ACM SIG proceedings template at http://www.acm.org/sigs/pubs/proceed/template.html (LaTeX users should use template Option 2). They should not exceed 12 letter-sized pages, not counting the bibliography and appendices. Papers should begin with a title, abstract, and an introduction that clearly summarizes the contributions of the paper at a level appropriate for a non-specialist reader. Papers should contain a scholarly exposition of ideas, techniques, and results, including motivation, relevance to practical applications, and a clear comparison with related work. Committee members are not required to read appendices, and papers should be intelligible without them. Submitted papers risk being rejected without consideration of their merits if they do not follow all the above guidelines. Submissions must not substantially duplicate work that was published elsewhere, or work that any of the authors has submitted in parallel to any other conference or workshop that has proceedings.

Authors will be asked to indicate whether their submissions should be considered for the best student paper award; any paper co-authored by a full-time student is eligible for this award.

Authors of accepted papers must guarantee that their paper will be presented at the conference. A limited number of stipends are available to those unable to obtain funding to attend the conference. Students whose papers are accepted and who will present the paper themselves are given priority to receive such assistance. Requests for stipends should be addressed to the general chair after July 15.

To submit a paper Authors should follow the Instructions posted at http://www.baylor.edu/ecrs2008/. A successful submission will display a web page confirming it, and a confirmation email is sent to the corresponding author. Please make sure you receive that confirmation email when you submit, and follow the directions in that email if you require any follow up.

Research In Progress (RIP)

A special category is available in the paper submission system for Research in Progress (RIP). This category allows for research that is not yet ready for publication but would be of interest to other researchers for presentation and discussion. For consideration in this category please submit an extensive abstract via the paper submission system using the instructions posted at http://www.baylor.edu/ecrs2008/. A successful submission will display a web page confirming it, and a confirmation email is sent to the corresponding author. Please make sure you receive that confirmation email when you submit, and follow the directions in that email if you require any follow up.

Posters

We also seek poster abstracts describing recent or ongoing research or experience in all areas related to the prevention of electronic crime. Submission of late breaking results and work in progress is especially encouraged. Posters will not be published, and thus may substantially overlap published papers or papers simultaneously submitted to a conference or journal. Submissions should follow the same formatting instructions as refereed papers, but should be at most two pages and need not be blinded or include abstracts, keywords, copyright boxes, etc. Poster abstract submissions are due September 3.

The conference will include a poster session in which authors will exhibit their posters. Note, poster abstracts should be formatted like short papers, not like posters. Authors of accepted posters will be sent information about how to prepare and format posters for the conference.

Submit your poster electronically on the conference web site. A successful submission will display a web page confirming it, and a confirmation email is sent to the corresponding author. Please make sure you receive that confirmation email when you submit, and follow the directions in that email if you require any follow up.

Important Dates

Paper submissions due: June 18, 2008 (midnight, US Pacific Standard Time)
Paper notification: July 29, 2008
Poster submissions due: September 3, 2008
Poster notifications: September 11, 2008
Camera ready due: September 18, 2008
Conference: October 15-16, 2008

Organizers

General Chair: Gary Warner, The University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB)

Progam Co-Chairs: Susanne Wetzel, Stevens Institute of Technology & Randy Vaughn, Baylor University

Steering Committee:

  • Jean Camp , Indiana University
  • Dorothy Denning, Naval Postgraduate School
  • Zulfikar Ramzan, Symantec
  • John S. Quarterman, InternetPerils, Inc.
  • Markus Jakobsson, PARC
  • J. J. Brennan, MITRE

Program Committee:

  • Joe St Sauver, University of Oregon
  • John LaCour, MarkMonitor, Inc.
  • Saeed Abu Nimeh, Southern Methodist University
  • Michael Collins, CERT
  • Prisca Doh, National Center for Victims of Crime
  • Andre Ludwig, NeuStar, Inc.
  • Bojan Zdrnja, University of Auckland
  • Christopher Burgess, Cisco Systems, Inc.
  • Madhusudhanan (Madhu) Chandrasekaran, University at Buffalo
  • Pat Cain, APWG Research Fellow
  • Mark Clancy, Citi, Inc.
  • Lorrie Cranor, Carnegie Mellon University
  • Tony Hansen, ATT, Inc.
  • Oliver Friedrichs, Symantec, Inc.
  • David Barroso, S21sec
  • Robert Danford,SANS Internet Storm Center
  • Stuart Morris, Tricerion Group, plc.
  • Minaxi Gupta, Indiana University
  • Anton Chuvakin, LogLogic, Inc.
  • Steven Myers, Indiana University
  • Shaun Vlassis, Australian Honeynet Project