The increasing proliferation of Information and communication technologies (ICT) in our lives, has facilitated the connectivity growth between distinct parts of our world. Various types of data are continuously streaming across many boundaries in the world with different models, policies, and purposes. Additionally, this data is usually analyzed or stored on edge or gateways devices which have highly limited capabilities and are vulnerable to sophisticated attacks. With the growth of connectivity between various heterogeneous systems, numerous attack vectors are constantly evolving, that can potentially be exploited for malicious or criminal purposes (e.g. data breaches, identity theft, and stealing of intellectual property and trade secrets, etc.). Recent cyberattacks dangerously aim a broad array of computing systems varying from data centers and personal machines to mobile devices and industrial control systems.
There is a growing need for new methodologies, tools, and techniques, capable of extracting, preserving, and analyzing different evidence trails in various networked services and devices such as routers, firewalls, web proxies, and network monitoring tools. Additionally, there is also a growing need for research in new systems that are capable of analyzing network traffic, netflows, and systems logs. Satisfying these demands will aid in reconstructing the timeline of the cyber-crime/attack under investigation and, possibly, the identification of the potential actor(s).
The evolution of networked technologies, such as the internet of things and cyber-physical systems, possess challenges based on the highly limited capabilities of their infrastructure devices and the type of data that can be processed by these devices. Complicated efforts are required in suitable and timely manners against any detected threats. Moreover, new frameworks are required to collect and preserve potential evidential data in suitable and timely manners as well. To guarantee proper cyber-defenses and strategies against the expanding landscape of criminal activities as well as rapidly advancing network technologies such as SDN or 5G and 6G.
The main motivation for this Workshop is to bring together researchers and practitioners working on cyber forensics and threat investigations for emerging networks to disseminate current research issues and advances. Original technical papers describing new, state-of-the-art research, will be considered. The Workshop welcomes submissions that evaluate existing research results by reproducing experiments. The aim of this workshop is to provide insight for the discussion of the major research challenges and achievements on various topics of interest.
CFATI1 2020 is a virtual workshop will be held in the 2nd of November, 2020.
There is a growing need for new methodologies, tools, and techniques, capable of extracting, preserving, and analyzing different evidence trails in various networked services and devices such as routers, firewalls, web proxies, and network monitoring tools. Additionally, there is also a growing need for research in new systems that are capable of analyzing network traffic, netflows, and systems logs. Satisfying these demands will aid in reconstructing the timeline of the cyber-crime/attack under investigation and, possibly, the identification of the potential actor(s).
The evolution of networked technologies, such as the internet of things and cyber-physical systems, possess challenges based on the highly limited capabilities of their infrastructure devices and the type of data that can be processed by these devices. Complicated efforts are required in suitable and timely manners against any detected threats. Moreover, new frameworks are required to collect and preserve potential evidential data in suitable and timely manners as well. To guarantee proper cyber-defenses and strategies against the expanding landscape of criminal activities as well as rapidly advancing network technologies such as SDN or 5G and 6G.
The main motivation for this Workshop is to bring together researchers and practitioners working on cyber forensics and threat investigations for emerging networks to disseminate current research issues and advances. Original technical papers describing new, state-of-the-art research, will be considered. The Workshop welcomes submissions that evaluate existing research results by reproducing experiments. The aim of this workshop is to provide insight for the discussion of the major research challenges and achievements on various topics of interest.
CFATI1 2020 is a virtual workshop will be held in the 2nd of November, 2020.
Scope of the workshop:
Papers on practical as well as on theoretical topics and problems in various topics related to cyber forensics and threat investigations, are invited, with special emphasis on novel techniques and tools to collect data from networked devices and services in emerging networks (such as the ones can be found in cyber-physical systems and Internet of things). Topics include (but are not limited to):
We also encourage contributions describing innovative work in the realm of cyber security, cyber defense, and digital crimes.
Papers on practical as well as on theoretical topics and problems in various topics related to cyber forensics and threat investigations, are invited, with special emphasis on novel techniques and tools to collect data from networked devices and services in emerging networks (such as the ones can be found in cyber-physical systems and Internet of things). Topics include (but are not limited to):
- Advanced threat investigations, forensic and anti-forensic techniques
- Cooperative and distributed forensics and threat investigations
- Data exfiltration techniques from networked devices and services (e.g. cyber-physical systems, and Internet-of-Things)
- Attack detection, traceback and attribution in SDN, 5G and 6G
- Methods for reconstruction of internet activities in SDN, 5G and 6G
- Forensics and threat investigations in IoT
- Forensics and threat investigations in peer-to-peer, social, and cloud networks
- Vulnerability & threat detection and mitigation techniques for networked services
- Novel large-scale investigations techniques to analyze intelligence data sets and logs
- Tools and services for cyber forensics and threat investigations
- VoIP forensics, VoIPoW forensics
We also encourage contributions describing innovative work in the realm of cyber security, cyber defense, and digital crimes.
Important Dates |
Submission Deadline: July 15 , 2020 (Extended) Authors Notifications: August 20, 2020 Final Manuscript Due: August 30, 2020 CFATI1 2020: November 2, 2020 |