Call for Papers

Introduction

This year, we are excited to expand the scope of the International Conference of Digital Forensics and Cyber Crime (ICDF2C), into Cyber Attacks Response and Defense (CARDS). The scope of digital forensics is expanding, and as we continuously explore mechanisms of hacking into devices to pull evidence, as well as find traces of evidence of complex hacks, it has become apparent that different cybersecurity communities have to start working together. The 2019 conference will embody this mission, and as such, has a new major track, focused on Attacks and Defense, complementing the existing, Response-focused ICDF2C track. We are excited about this change, and we hope that this will inspire scientists and practitioners in various cybersecurity sub-disciplines to work together. We are especially interested in promoting, inspiring and embracing applied cybersecurity work, and we are aiming to position this conference as the premiere venue for applied cybersecurity and forensics.

Scope

Emerging technologies bring with them new avenues for cyber attacks, and this requires new strategies for cyber defense. Moreover, the increased complexity of communication and networking infrastructure has made the investigation of cybercrime more difficult. Clues of illegal activities are often buried in large volumes of data that needs to be sifted through in order to detect crimes and collect evidence. The field of digital forensics and cybercrime investigation has become very important for law enforcement, national security, and information assurance.

This conference brings together practitioners and researchers from diverse fields providing opportunities for engagement among attendees. The conference is not only a venue for networking, but also provides high-quality training opportunities through expert speakers and tutorials on basic and advanced forensic and high attack/defensive methods on a large scale applied on emerging on new technologies.

Paper topics

We encourage submissions of presentations and papers for our two tracks:

  • ICDF2C – Digital Forensics and Cyber Crime
  • Attacks and Defense (NEW)

Some topics of interest for the Attacks and Defense track include but are not limited to:

  • Measurement studies
  • Cyber warfare attacks and defense
  • Social cyber-attacks and defense
  • Memory exploitation
  • Applied cryptography
  • Network protocol vulnerability analysis
  • Blockchain attacks
  • Reverse engineering, and reverse engineering Automation
  • Operational experience and case studies
  • Malware infection vectors (drivebys, worms, mobile exploits, etc.)
  • Phishing
  • Applied decryption techniques
  • Eavesdropping
  • SPAM
  • Attacks and Defense of emerging technologies
  • Carding and identity theft
  • Hardware vulnerabilities
  • Insider threat detection and prevention
  • Application of data science to cyber attacks and defense
  • Attacks against distributed cloud storage

Some topics of interest for the ICDF2C track include but are not limited to:

  • Advances in traditional system forensic methods
  • Anti-Forensics
  • Social cyber forensics
  • New filesystem analysis
  • Memory forensics
  • Multimedia and artifact analysis
  • Emerging approaches in Cyber Forensics
  • Incident Response (IR) and malware analysis
  • SCADA Forensics and Critical Infrastructure Protection
  • Digital forensic science
  • Cyber Crime Law, Psychology and Economics
  • Forensic analysis of new technologies
  • Network forensics
  • IoT forensics
  • Drone forensics
  • Gaming device forensics
  • Image and video forensics
  • Application of data science to forensics and incidence response
  • Forensics of distributed cloud storage

Paper submission

Papers should be submitted through the EAI Confy system, and have to comply with the Springer LNCS format (https://www.springer.com/gp/computer-science/lncs/conference-proceedings-guidelines).

  • Regular papers should be 10 to 20 pages in length.
  • Short papers should be 6 to 10 pages in length.

When uploading your paper, please upload both a PDF formatted according to the Springer LNCS format, and an archive file (e.g. ZIP, tar.gz) containing both the PDF version and the LaTeX or Word source file.

Anonymous Submission

The review process will be double blind. Papers must be submitted in a form suitable for anonymous review:

  • The title page should not contain any author names or affiliations.
  • Authors should carefully review figures and appendices (especially survey instruments) to ensure affiliations are not accidentally included.
  • 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 in the (unusual) case that a third-person reference is infeasible.
  • Authors may include links to websites that contain source code, tools, or other supplemental material. The link in the paper should not contain the author’s name or affiliation. However, the website itself may contain the authors’ names and affiliations.

Papers that are not properly anonymized may be rejected without review.

Paper publication

All registered papers will be submitted for publication by Springer and made available through SpringerLink Digital Library.

CARDS proceedings are submitted for inclusion in Ei Compendex, ISI Web of Science, Scopus, CrossRef, Google Scholar, DBLP, as well as EAI’s own EU Digital Library (EUDL).

Authors of selected best accepted and presented papers will be invited to submit an extended version to:

All accepted authors are eligible to submit an extended version in a fast track of:

Other submission categories

The Conference Organizing Committee invites submissions from individuals or groups to conduct Special Workshops and/or technical tutorials. The purpose of workshops is to emphasize emerging topics of particular interest to the conference attendees not specifically covered in the main conference, technical skill development, new technologies, and industry perspectives.

  • Industrial Talk: Typically a 1,000 word description of the proposed talk. All talks must be vendor neutral.
  • Panel Proposal: Typically a 1,000 word description, identifying the panelists to be involved.
  • Workshop/Tutorial Proposal: Typically a 1,000 word description of topic(s), potential speakers, program length, hands-on activity and potential audience. Also, include proposer resume(s).

Workshop/tutorial proposals should include the following information:

  • Proposed title and organizers (names, affiliations, email; identify one primary contact person).
  • Description of workshop: objectives, goals, and expected outcomes.
  • Statement regarding how the workshop can benefit the conference attendees/community.
  • Any special space or equipment requests.
  • Biographical sketches of the organizers.

Proposals will be peer-reviewed and rated using the following criteria:

  • Relevance to conference vision/topics and attendees
  • Potential to bring in participants to the conference from different audiences
  • Overall quality of contribution
  • Provides a hands-on, collaborative, and/or active learning environment for attendees

For any proposal submissions, or for questions about workshops and tutorial proposals, please contact the workshop chair at fabio.pierazzi@kcl.ac.uk using the subject line “[CARDS 2019] Workshop Proposal”.

Important dates

Full Paper Submission deadline
1 April 2019 EXTENDED 14th April

Workshop/Tutorial Proposal deadline
1 April 2019

Notification deadline
7 June 2019

Camera-ready deadline

15 June 2019

Start of Conference

16 September 2019

End of Conference

18 September 2019