The 2007 RUSENIX Security Symposium
The 2007 RUSENIX Security Symposium was held on December 12, 2007.
The program committee put together an outstanding program of 12 papers,
covering a wide range of topics.
Conference venue
The symposium was held in Hill-254 in Piscataway, NJ. The symposium
facility, which boasts state-of-the-art conference equipment, such as a
blackboard, projector, and space for up to 25 attendees, is a stone's throw
away from such local attractions as the Raritan canal and Rutgers stadium.
Organizing committee
General Chair, Program Chair, Program Committee (sole member), Local
Arrangements Chair, Awards Committee Chair, Session Chair, Publicity Chair,
Whatchamacallit Chair: Vinod Ganapathy, Rutgers University.
Important dates
Abstracts due: December 5, 2007,
as a plain text email to the Program Chair.
Final paper due: December 14, 2007,
as a single PDF document to the Program Chair.
Hard deadline.
Symposium: December 12, 2007, 3:20pm-6:20pm in Hill-254.
Program
The program consisted of six sessions, shown below. If you want more details,
such as the accepted papers and presentations, please email the program chair!
Session 1: Input Sanitization
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15:20-15:35:
Ciprian Docan and Sumita Bhallamudi.
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15:36-15:50:
Matthew Casella and Denitsa Tilkidjieva.
Session 2: Web Security
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15:51-16:05:
Blase Ur.
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16:06-16:20:
Chih-Cheng Chang and Linda Yaeger.
Session 3: Language-based Techniques for Security
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16:21-16:35:
Bruno Dufour and Syeda Arzoo Zehra.
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16:36-16:50:
Desiree Ottoni.
Session 4: Systems Security
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16:51-17:05:
Mohan Dhawan and Sandilya S. B.
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17:06-17:20:
Shakeel Butt.
Session 5: Security of Localization Systems
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17:21-17:35:
Anantha K. Addanki and Robert S. Moore.
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17:36-17:50:
Gayathri Chandrashekaran and Melville Goveas.
Session 6: Learning-based Techniques for Security
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17:51-18:05:
Chris Lauderdale and Hans C. Woithe.
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18:06-18:20:
Stephen Smaldone.
Best presentation award
The award for the best presentation was given jointly to two teams:
- Blase Ur, for his work entitled "Master of Puppetnets", and
- Gayathri Chandrashekaran and Melville Goveas, for their work
entitled "RIDE: Reliable identity spoof detection and elimination"
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