FSE 2015 rump session: Submission form


To request a talk slot at the FSE 2015 rump session, fill out the following form before Tuesday 10 March 2015, 10:45 Istanbul time. Some submissions may have to be rejected because of time constraints; please remember that the rump session is meant for short and entertaining presentations.

The file-switching time before each rump-session talk often seems longer than the talk itself, and often is longer than the talk itself. The FSE 2015 rump session will attempt to reduce the talk-switching time by concatenating PDFs for adjacent talks. If you plan to give a talk without slides, or if you don't have slides ready yet, please prepare and submit one slide stating your name and talk title.

Online updates of slides for previous submissions will be accepted until 14:30 on Tuesday. Updated slides will not be accepted on USB sticks or by email.


Submission ID to make a new submission:

Submission ID to view/revise/withdraw an existing submission:


Requested minutes for talk (1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, or 7):

Example: 7

Title:

Example: Ubuntu Pollinate

Authors:

Example: Dustin Kirkland and the Canonical Cloud Solutions Team

Speaker:

Example: Dustin Kirkland

Email address (not for publication) for confirming submission:

Name of PDF file with slides to upload:

I am the speaker. I understand that rump sessions are often webcast and recorded.

Please include the audio and video of my talk in the online record of the rump session, if there is an official recording.

Please include these slides in the online record of the rump session.

Brief summary (not for publication) of this talk:

Example: We have an online source of random numbers to stir your entropy pool. If your computer is doing a bad job of generating its own random numbers, this won't do anything to stop a serious collect-it-all attacker from figuring out your secret keys, but it will do a fantastic job of hiding the problem from academic researchers. Remember, the goal isn't security; the goal is to keep insecurity out of the news. Inspired by a NIST project.
Example: We present a complete, objective, non-controversial classification of all CAESAR candidates.

Explanation (not for publication) of why this talk belongs in the rump session:

Example: News. Found this result four weeks ago.
Example: Advertising result that appeared at Asiacrypt 2014.
Example: Have already bribed the rump-session chairs.
Example: Has been accepted for Eurocrypt 2015.
Example: Will be funny, I promise.
Example: Was unfairly rejected from the regular program.