[ACM SIGCOMM 2005 Workshop on Mining Network Data (MineNet-05)]

From: k claffy (no email)
Date: Tue Mar 01 2005 - 16:56:46 EST

  • Next message: J.D. Falk: "Re: Why do so few mail providers support Port 587?"

    perhaps more relevant to nanog-futures list but
    i'll assume everyone cares.

    k

    ----- Forwarded message from Bob Braden <> -----

      Date: Mon, 28 Feb 2005 08:50:30 -0800 (PST)
      From: Bob Braden <>
      Subject: [e2e] ACM SIGCOMM 2005 Workshop on Mining Network Data (MineNet-05)
      To:
      
      
      
     -------------------------------------------------------------------
      
      Call for papers
            
      
       ******************************************************************
       * *
       * SIGCOMM 2005 Workshop on Mining Network Data (MineNet-05) *
       * *
       * (to be held with SIGCOMM 2005, Aug 20-26, Philadelphia, USA) *
       * *
       * http://www.acm.org/sigs/sigcomm/sigcomm2005/cfp-minenet.html *
       ******************************************************************
      
      Today's IP networks are extensively instrumented for collecting a wealth
      of information including traffic traces (e.g., packet or flow level
      traces), control (e.g., router forwarding tables, BGP and OSPF updates),
      and management (e.g., alarms, SNMP traps) data. The real challenge is to
      process and analyze this vast amount of primarily unstructured
      information and extract structures, relationships, and "higher level
      knowledge" embedded in it and use it to aid network management and
      operations. The goal of this one day workshop is to explore new
      directions in network data collection, storage, and analysis techniques,
      and their application to network monitoring, management, and
      remediation. The workshop will provide a venue for researchers and
      practitioners from different backgrounds, including networking, data
      mining, machine learning, and statistics, to get together and
      collaboratively approach this problem from their respective vantage
      points.
      
      We are soliciting original/position papers on topics (including, but not
      limited to) listed below.
      
         - Collection, storage & access infrastructure: platform
           instrumentation (e.g. multi-modal, multi-resolution sensors),
           collection techniques (e.g. event sampling, filtering,
           aggregation, etc.), storage and access (e.g. retention policy,
           indexing techniques etc.).
      
         - Network data analytics techniques & tools: network stream mining,
           network graph mining, micro-clustering, temporal and statistical
           correlation, causality tracking, machine learning.
      
        - Applications to network operations & management: network problem
           determination, network reliability and performance, root-cause
           analysis, security, emerging phenomenon detection (e.g. DDoS,
           virus/worm, spam etc.), traffic classification.
      
      Of particular interest are (i) new solution techniques as well as
      applications of existing techniques from data mining, machine learning
      and statistics to IP network problems, (ii) experiences with the use of
      such techniques for IP networks, and (iii) open networking problems and
      challenges that would benefit from the use of such techniques. Selected
      papers will be forward-looking, with impact and implications for both
      operational networks and ongoing or future research.
      
      Submission Instructions
      -----------------------
      
      Papers should be at most 6 pages long, in standard ACM format
      (single-spaced, double column, at least 10pt font). Accepted papers will
      appear in the workshop proceedings. Authors of accepted papers are
      expected to present their work at the workshop. Detailed submission
      guidelines will be available soon at
      http://www.acm.org/sigs/sigcomm/sigcomm2005/cfp-minenet.html.
      
      
      Important Dates
      ---------------
      
      Submission Deadline: Wed, April 6, 2005, 9.00 PM EST
      
      Notification Deadline: May 10, 2005
      Camera Ready Deadline: May 30, 2005
      Workshop Date: Aug 26, 2005
      
      
      
      Workshop Organizing Chairs
      --------------------------
      
      Subhabrata Sen, AT&T Research
      Chuanyi Ji, Georgia Tech
      Debanjan Saha, IBM Research
      Joe McCloskey, Dept. of Defense
      
      
      Technical Program Committee
      ----------------------------
      
      
      Constantinos Dovrolis, Georgia Tech.
      
      Chuanyi Ji, Georgia Tech.
      
      Nick Koudas, Univ. of Toronto
      
      Vipin Kumar, Univ. of Minnesota
      
      Joe McCloskey, Dept. of Defense
      
      Robert Novak, Univ. of Wisconsin-Madison
      
      Rajeev Rastogi, Lucent Bell Labs
      
      John Reumann, IBM Research
      
      Jennifer Rexford, Princeton Univ.
      
      Mathew Roughan, Univ. of Adelaide
      
      Debanjan Saha, IBM Research
      
      Subhabrata Sen, AT&T Research
      
      William Szewczyk, Dept. of Defense
      
      Walter Willinger, AT&T Research
      
      Zhi-Li Zhang, Univ. of Minnesota
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      ----- End Included Message -----

    ----- End forwarded message -----


  • Next message: J.D. Falk: "Re: Why do so few mail providers support Port 587?"





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