GameSec 2020

From ConfIDent
Deadlines
2020-08-10
2020-06-22
2020-09-07
2020-06-29
22
Jun
2020
Abstract
29
Jun
2020
Submission
10
Aug
2020
Notification
7
Sep
2020
Camera-Ready
Metrics
Submitted Papers
29
Accepted Papers
21
Accepted Short Papers
2
Venue

College Park, Maryland

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  • Softcover ISBN 978-3-030-64792-6
  • eBook ISBN 978-3-030-64793-3

2020 Conference on Decision and Game Theory for Security

Due to COVID-19 pandemic the conference was held virtually

Important Dates

  • Abstract (optional): June 22nd, 2020
  • Submission: June 29th, 2020
  • Decision notification: August 10th, 2020
  • Camera-ready: September 7th, 2020

GameSec 2020 and Covid-19 (important): The GameSec 2020 leadership team is actively monitoring the COVID-19 situation to ensure the safety, comfort and quality of experience for attendees and a successful course of the event. The GameSec 2020 leadership team is committed to holding the conference in 2020 as planned. In order to accommodate a large number of situations, we are offering the option for either physical presence or virtual participation.

TOPICS

Conference Topics include (but are not restricted to): GameSec solicits research papers, which report original results and have neither been published nor submitted for publication elsewhere, on the following and other closely related topics:'Kursiver Text'

  • Game theory, control, and mechanism design for security and privacy
  • Decision making for cybersecurity and security requirements engineering
  • Security and privacy for the Internet-of-Things, cyber-physical systems, cloud computing, resilient control systems, and critical infrastructure
  • Pricing, economic incentives, security investments, and cyber insurance for dependable and secure systems
  • Risk assessment and security risk management
  • Security and privacy of wireless and mobile communications, including user location privacy
  • Socio-technological and behavioral approaches to security
  • Empirical and experimental studies with game, control, or optimization theory-based analysis for security and privacy
  • Adversarial Machine Learning and the role of AI in system security
  • Modeling and analysis of deception and antagonistic intrusion of information flow within a game-theoretic framework

Organizers

General Chairs

  • John S. Baras (University of Maryland)
  • Radha Poovendran (University of Washington)

TPC Chair

  • Quanyan Zhu (New York University)
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