IEEE Secure Development Conference

SecDev 2022


Computer Security & Cryptography Security & Trust & Testing



Call For Papers and Tutorials
We solicit research papers and “best practice” papers on a broad range of topics relating to secure systems development. Examples​ ​of​ ​topics​ ​that​ ​are​ ​in​ ​scope​ ​include:​ ​​development libraries,​ ​tools,​ ​or​ ​processes​ to ​produce​ ​systems​ ​resilient​ ​to​ ​certain​ ​attacks;​ ​formal foundations that underpin​ ​a​ ​language,​ ​tool,​ ​or​ ​testing​ ​strategy​ ​that​ ​improves​ ​security;​ ​techniques that​ ​drastically​ ​improve​ ​the​ ​scalability​ ​of​ ​security​ ​solutions​ ​for​ ​practical​ ​deployment;​ ​and experience,​ ​designs,​ ​or​ ​applications​ ​showing​ ​how​ ​to​ ​apply​ ​cryptographic​ ​techniques​ ​effectively to​ ​secure​ ​systems.
​SecDev also ​seeks hands-on​ ​and​ ​interactive​ ​tutorials​ ​on​ ​processes,​ ​frameworks,​ ​languages,​ ​and​ ​tools​ ​for​ ​building security​ ​in.​ ​The​ ​goal​ ​is​ ​to​ ​share​ ​knowledge​ ​on​ ​the​ ​art​ ​and​ ​science​ ​of​ ​secure​ ​systems development.​ SecDev also seeks posters and tool demos, and abstracts​ ​from​ ​practitioners​ ​to​ ​share​ ​their​ ​practical experiences​ ​and​ ​challenges​ ​in​ ​security​ ​development. Information on these solicitations are available on the SecDev website https://secdev.ieee.org/2022/home/
Areas of interest include (but are not limited to):
Security/resiliency-focused​ ​system​ ​designs​ ​(HW/SW/architecture)
Tools​ ​and​ ​methodology​ ​for​ ​secure​ ​code​ ​development
Risk​ ​management​ ​and​ ​testing​ ​strategies​ ​to​ ​improve​ ​security
Security​ ​engineering​ ​processes,​ ​from​ ​requirements​ ​to​ ​maintenance
Security benchmarks
Comparative experimental evaluation
Programming​ ​languages,​ ​development​ ​tools,​ ​and​ ​ecosystems​ ​supporting​ ​security
Static​ ​program​ ​analysis​ ​for​ ​software​ ​security
Dynamic​ ​analysis​ ​and​ ​runtime​ ​approaches​ ​for​ ​software​ ​security
Automation​ ​of​ ​programming,​ ​deployment,​ ​and​ ​maintenance​ ​tasks​ ​for​ ​security
Distributed​ ​systems​ ​design​ ​and​ ​implementation​ ​for​ ​security
Privacy by design
Human-centered​ ​design​ ​for​ ​systems​ ​security
Formal​ ​verification​ ​and​ ​other​ ​high-assurance​ ​methods​ ​for​ ​security
Code​ ​reviews,​ ​red​ ​teams,​ ​and​ ​other​ ​human-centered​ ​assurance
Submissions​ ​must​ ​be​ ​one​ ​of​ ​two ​categories:
Research Papers​, up to 6 pages, excluding references and well-marked appendices. These must be well-argued and worthy of publication and citation, on the topics above. Research papers must present new work, evidence, or ideas. Position papers with exceptional visions will also be considered. Authors of accepted papers will present their work at the conference (e.g., in a 30-minute slot) and their papers will appear in the conference’s formal IEEE proceedings.
To improve the fairness of the reviewing process, SecDev will follow a light-weight double-blind reviewing process. Submitted papers must (a) omit any reference to the authors’ names or the names of their institutions, and (b) reference the authors’ own related work in the third person (e.g., not “We build on our previous work …” but rather “We build on the work of …”). Nothing should be done in the name of anonymity that weakens the submission or makes the job of reviewing the paper more difficult (e.g., important background references should not be omitted or anonymized). Please see the double-blind FAQ for the answers to many common concerns about SecDev’s double-blind reviewing process. When in doubt, contact the program chairs.
Tutorial​ ​proposals, up to 2 pages and cover (a) the topic; (b) a summary of the tutorial format highlighting hands-on aspects and possibly pointers to relevant materials; (c) the expected audience and expected learning outcomes; (d) prior tutorials or talks on similar topics by the authors (and audience size), if any. The title of the submission should be prefixed with “Tutorial:”. Tutorial proposals do not need to be anonymized.
Accepted tutorials should aim to be either 90 minutes or 180 minutes long. We strongly encourage tutorials to have hands-on components and audience interactions. We do not recommend simply slide presentations. Accepted tutorials may provide an abstract that will appear in the conference’s formal IEEE proceedings. Tutorials will occur on the first day of the conference (Tuesday, October 18). Note that if an accepted tutorial requires special materials or environments for hands-on participation, we expect the authors to provide necessary preparation instructions for the attendees.
At least one author of each accepted paper and tutorial must register for the conference and present the paper/tutorial.
We​ ​are​ ​devoted​ ​to​ ​seeking​ ​broad​ ​representation​ ​in​ ​the​ ​program​ ​and​ ​may​ ​take​ ​this​ ​into​ ​account when​ ​reviewing​ ​multiple​ ​submissions​ ​from​ ​the​ ​same​ ​authors.​
If​ ​you​ ​have​ ​any​ ​questions​,​ please​ ​email​ ​​secdev22-pc@ieee.org.
The website for submissions: https://secdev2022.hotcrp.com/