转自: http://blog.csdn.net/celestialwy/article/details/1619538 ComputerSecurityConferenceRanking and Statistic Guofei Gu Ranking Note: How to judge how good a conference is? In my opinion, here are several criteria: Acceptance ratio: definitely an important metric (maybe the easiest metric that can be quantified), but not the only metric Paper quality and impact: how many classic papers are from this conference? how much impact do papers from this conference have on the community? are they well cited and studied? Committee member quality: what's the quality of TPC members? are they noted researchers in this area? This is an important factor because they will affect the quality of submission (good papers will prefer to submit to the conference with noted researchers in the committee), and control the quality of accepted papers. Attendee/Paper number ratio: another quantified metric. This somehow reflects the influence of this conference on the community Location: a beautiful place has some attraction. In addition, many researchers (but not all) are not very willing to travel to other countries due to limited funding or time (or VISA problem...), so they just submit papers to local conferences. Thus, normally the conferences located in USA are better than in Europe, which is also better than in Asia. H istory: a conference with a long history may have a good tradition and reputation Industry connection: this somehow reflects the impact on the industry. Normally, conferences on more applied techniques will attract more industry partners (so have more money to improve the quality of conference) This ranking list is only in my opinion. It is not official, nor accurate, only for reference. Some good workshops are also included. I'm probably biased because I'm mainly a network/system security researcher. Notify me if you have different views, or you find significant conferences missing/bias. I'm more than happy to hear from you. Some conferences are arguably better belonging to rank 1.5 or 2.5. At this time, I'm not going to differentiate these. Let me know if you have some strong comments. Long time ago, I maintained a general computer science conference ranking (a mirror of my previous Georgia Tech page). Rank 1 SP (Oakland) IEEESymposiumonSecurityandPrivacy CCS ACMConferenceonComputerandCommunicationsSecurity Crypto International Cryptology Conference Eurocrypt EuropeanCryptology Conference Security UsenixSecuritySymposium NDSS ISOC Network and Distributed System Security Symposium Rank 2 ESORICS EuropeanSymposiumonResearchinComputerSecurity RAID International Symposium on Recent Advances in Intrusion Detection ACSAC Annual Computer Security Applications Conference DSN The International Conference on Dependable Systems and Networks CSF (CSFW) IEEEComputer Security Foundations Symposium. Supersedes CSFW (ComputerSecurityFoundationsWorkshop) TCC Theory of Cryptography Conference Asiacrypt International Conference on the Theory and Application of Cryptology and Information Security IMC Internet Measurement Conference Rank 3 SecureComm IEEE Communications Society/CreateNet Internation Conference on Security and Privacy for Emerging Areas in Communication Networks DIMVA GI SIG SIDAR Conference on Detection of Intrusions and Malware and Vulnerability Assessment AsiaCCS ACM Symposium on Information, Computer and Communications Security ACNS International Conference on Applied Cryptography and Network Security FC International Conference on Financial Cryptography and Data Security SAC ACM Symposium on Applied Computing ACISP AustralasiaConferenceonInformationSecurityandPrivacy ICICS International Conference on Information and Communications Security ISC Information Security Conference ICISC International Conference on Information Security and Cryptology SACMAT ACM Symposium on Access Control Models and Technologies CT-RSA RSA Conference, Cryptographers' Track SEC IFIP International Information Security Conference WiSec (WiSe, SASN) ACM Conference on Wireless Network Security Supersedes WiSe (ACM Workshop on Wireless Security) and SASN (ACM Workshop on Security of Ad-Hoc and Sensor Networks) SOUPS Symposium On Usable Privacy and Security IFIP WG 11.9 IFIP WG 11.9 International Conference on Digital Forensics -- Workshops below -- DFRWS Digital Forensic Research Workshop FSE Fast Software Encryption workshop PKC International Workshop on Public-Key Cryptography NSPW New Security Paradigms Workshop IH WorkshoponInformationHiding WSPEC WorkshoponSecurityandPrivacyinE-commerce DRM ACM Workshop on Digital Rights Management IWIA IEEE International Information Assurance Workshop IAW IEEE SMC Information Assurance Workshop "The West Point Workshop" CHES Workshop on Cryptographic Hardware and Embedded Systems SRUTI USENIX Workshop on Steps to Reducing Unwanted Traffic on the Internet HotSec USENIX Workshop on Hot Topics in Security LEET (HotBots,WORM) USENIX Workshop on Large-scale Exploits and Emergent Threats Supersedes HotBots (USENIX Workshop on Hot Topics in Understanding Botnets) and WORM (ACM Workshop on Recurring/Rapid Malcode) Others (not ranked) ISPEC Information Security Practice and Experience Conference Acceptance Ratio Statistic Note: This could be the most complete (and accurate?) list of computer security conference statistic you can find on Internet. There are still some blanks in this list. If you have any reliable source of these information (or some other security conferences), please email me ( guofei AT cs.tamu.edu ). Thanks. You can see from the following statistic, security conferences are becoming harder and harder to get in in the recent five years! And I think this trend will possible continue in the near future. Year Rank 1 Rank 2 Rank 3 Year IEEE SP ACM CCS USENIX Security NDSS CSF/CSFW ESORICS RAID ACSAC IMC SecureComm DIMVA AsiaCCS ACNS SOUPS DFRWS 2010 15.4%(24/156) 2010 2009 10% (26/253) 18.4%(58/315) 14.7%(26/176) 11.7% (20/171) 19.1%(42/220) 19.6%(44/224) 25.3%19/75,full paper) 34.7%(26/75) 29.5%(13/44) 22.4% (33/147, regular) 27% (40/147) 21% (32/150) 2009 2008 11.2% (28/249) 18%(51/281) 15.9% (27/170) 17.8% (21/118) 18%(21/115) 22%(37/168) 25%(20/80) 24%(42/173) 33%(14/42) 17.6% (32/182,full) 22.5% (41/182) 22.9%(30/131) 28%(12/43) 39.5%(17/43) 2008 2007 8% (20/246,full paper) 12% (29/246) 18% (55/303) 12.3% (23/187) 14.4% (18/125) 25%(25/101) 23.8%(39/164) 18%(18/100) 22%(42/191) 26%(31/119) 24.6%(14/57) 18.3% (33/180,full paper) 29.4% (53/180) 12% (31/260) 31.7%(13/41) 47.2%(17/36) 2007 2006 9.2% (23/251, full paper) 12.7% (32/251) 14.8%(38/256) 12.3% (22/179) 13.4% (17/127) 24.5%(25/102) 20%(32/160) 17% (16/93) 30%(40/134) 21% (19/92, full paper track) 25.4%(32/126) 26.8%(11/41) 17.7% (33/186) Start from 2006 15.1% (33/218) 36%(14/39) 44.4%(16/36) 2006 2005 8.9% (17/192) 15.2% (38/250) 14.8% (22/149) 12.9% (16/124) 20.8% (20/96) 17.0% (27/159) 20.5% (17/83) 22.8% (45/197) 27% (22/82, full paper) 22.2% (32/144, full paper) 36.1% (52/144) Start from 2005 27%(14/51) 22.2% (35/158) 10/39 2005 2004 10.2% (19/186) 13.9% (35/251) 12.0% (22/184) 16.3% (16/98) ? (20/?) 17.0% (27/159) 13.5% (16/118) 26.1% (35/134) 19% (19/98,full paper) 34%(14/41) Start from 2004 12.1% (36/297) 2004 2003 14.5% (19/131) 13.8% (35/253) 16.4% (21/128) 20.5% (17/83) ? (17/?) 16.7% (19/114) 29.5% (13/44) 26% (19/73, full paper) 16.8% (32/191) Start from 2003 2003 2002 22.1% (21/95) 17.6% (27/153) 16.9% (22/130) 19.0% (15/79) 27.4% (23/84) 19.3% (16/83) 25.0% (16/64) 24% (15/62, full paper) 2002 2001 17.8% (19/107) 17.6% (27/153) 28.9% (24/83) 24.2% (16/66) 38.9% (21/54) not held 21.8% (12/55) 26% (14/53), Start from 2001 2001 2000 13.1% (18/137) 21.2% (28/132) 29.4% (15/51) 45.8% (22/48) 25.3% (19/75) 53.8% (14/26) 2000 1999 24.6% (15/61) 19.3% (16/83) 40.4% (19/47) not held ? (32/?) 1999 1998 16.4% (19/116) 20.0% (17/85) 33.3% (15/45) 40.4% (23/57) 67.3% (35/52) Start from 1998 1998 1997 18.2% (20/110) 26.6% (17/64) not held not held 1997 1996 29.9% (20/67) 32.2% (19/59) 36.2% (21/58) 1996 1995 27.8% (20/72) not held not held 1995 1994 29.2% (19/65) 44.3% (31/70) not held Start from 1994? 36.6% (26/71) 1994 1993 24.3% (17/70) 45.0% (27/60) Start from 1993 not held 1993 1992 23.6% (21/89) ? (24/?) 1992 1991 30.4% (28/92) not held 1991 1990 Start from 1990? ? (?/?) Start from 1990 1990 1989 1989 1988 Start from 1988 1988 1987 1987 1986 27.5% (25/91) 1986 1985 39.7% (25/63) Start from 1985 1985 1984 64.1% (25/39) 1984 1983 67.6% (23/34) 1983 1982 55.9% (19/34) 1982 1981 1981 1980 100% (19/19) Start from 1980 1980 Thanks the following people for information and suggestions/comments on the ranking and statistic: Mihai Christodorescu, Kevin Almeroth, Jianying Zhou, Zhiqiang Lin, Jonathan Katz, Vinod Yegneswaran, Thomas Zimmermann, Thorsten Holz, Paul A. Karger, Monirul Sharif, Ragib Hasan, Simson Garfinkel, Robin Sommer, Ton van Deursen, ... , and you. Oakland:95分,全称IEEE Symposium on Security Privacy,每年都在Oakland召开。 之所以不简称SP,是为了跟一个magazine----IEEE Security Privacy区分开来。被认 为是计算机安全的最高会议,比ACM的CCS更受尊敬。该会自称接受一切与计算机安全的文 章,但我感觉其以应用型为主,对理论性的文章尤其crypto-flavor的文章非常排斥。 CCS:92分,ACM SIGSAC的年会。该会宣称只接受practical papers,然而事实上却是安全 方面最diversified的会议,从纯粹密码学的文章到非常应用性的文章都有。传统上该会议 的politics比较严重,但今年的program committee非常强大,有望使会议质量进一步提高 。 USENIX Security:91分。USENIX是systems research方面的重要组织,主办了systems方面的若干重要会议,如OSDI(操作系统的第二会议)等。USENIX Security Symposium则是systems security的著名会议,文章基本陷于hardcore systems类型。 NDSS:90分,很好的一个关于网络和分布式系统安全的会议,偏应用型。 ESORICS:88分,欧洲的计算机安全年会。跟CCS一样广泛的范围,包容性甚至更强。 CSFW:85分,一个小型的workshop,然而在安全方面有一定影响。算是为数不多的受到尊 敬的workshops之一。 ACSAC:82分?一个纯粹应用型的安全会议,纯粹到其文章大部分都很难算作传统意义上的 research papers。但其研究的问题都非常的实用和有趣。 SACMAT:82分?Access control方面的一个比较重要的会议。 SecureComm:今年刚刚办起来的网络安全会议。从其program commitee来看,起点很高。 但能有多大影响还要过一段时间才能知道。 *********************************** CRYPTO(95分),EUROCRYPT(94分),ASIACRYPT(90分):IACR的三大年会,在“我知 道的几个理论会议”里已经写过。 TCC(87分):一个新会议,focused on 密码学理论。起点很高,但能有多大影响还要过一段时间才能知道 ACNS(84分?):密码学与网络安全结合的会议。历史很短,但接受率颇低(百分之十五 以下)。 转自 http://faculty.cs.tamu.edu/guofei/sec_conf_stat.htm
2010 ACM SIGKDD Intenational Conference on Knowledge Discovery and Data Mining (KDD-2010) 会议网址: http://www.kdd.org/kdd2010/ 论文提交截止日期:2010年2月2日 会议地点:美国华盛顿,2010年7月25日2010年7月28日 这是ACM主办的著名顶级国际会议,基本上是每年召开一次,KDD 2010已是16届,每年会议均被EI、ISTP收录。 2009 年的15届KDD会议是在法国巴黎召开,被ISTP收录139篇,其中美国87篇、中国16篇、加拿大6篇、德国4篇、意大利4篇、日本4篇、新加坡3篇、以色列2篇等。 清华大学4篇、香港中文大学3篇、微软亚洲研究院2篇、北京航空航天大学1篇、北京邮电大学1篇、IBM 中国研究院1篇、北京大学1篇、浙江大学1篇、中山大学1篇、厦门大学1篇、YAHOO 研究院1 篇 等著名学校均在15届会议上发表论文。 会议主题: * data mining algorithms (supervised, semi-supervised and unsupervised) * data mining foundations and theory * dimensionality reduction and feature selection * mining dynamic and evolving data * mining graph data * mining semi-structured data * mining spatial and temporal data * mining stream data * mixed-initiative data mining and active learning * outlier analysis and anomaly detection * parallel and distributed data mining algorithms * pattern mining and association analysis * robust and highly scalable data mining algorithms * similarity search in data mining * statistical methods in data mining * topic models and matrix methods in data mining * transfer learning and mining with auxiliary data sources * adversarial data mining algorithms * biological and medical data mining * data mining for computational advertising * data mining in social sciences and on social networks * mining environmental and scientific data * mining sensor data * mining user behavioral and feedback data * mining the Web and text data * multimedia data mining * data mining for other novel applications * data integration and indexing for data mining * data visualization for data mining * KDD methodology and process * platforms and systems for KDD * pre-processing and post-processing in data mining * security and privacy issues in data mining * user modeling in data mining