International Conference on Availability, Reliability and Security
The ARES - The International Conference on Availability, Reliability and Security focuses on rigorous and novel research in the field of dependability, computer and information security. In cooperation with the conference several workshops are held covering a huge variety of security topics. The Conference and Workshop Proceedings are published by IEEE Computer Society Press.
The conference is hosted by universities and research institutions:
- 2006: Vienna University of Technology, Austria
- 2007: Vienna University of Technology, Austria, in co-operation with ENISA - The Network and Information Security Agency of the European Union
- 2008: Polytechnic University of Catalonia, Austria, in co-operation with ENISA
- 2009: Fukuoka Institute of Technology, Japan
2008: Polytechnic University of Catalonia (UPC) Barcelona, Spain
In 2008 the keynotes of the ARES conference were held by:
- Prof. Ravi Sandhu, Executive Director, Chief Scientist and Founder, Institute for Cyber-Security Research (ICSR) and Lutcher Brown Endowed Chair in Cyber-Security
- Prof. Günther Pernul, Department of Information Systems, University of Regensburg
- Prof. Vijay Atluri, Management Science and Information Systems Department, Research Director of the Center for Information Management, Integration and Connectivity (CIMIC), Rutgers University
The acceptance rate ARES 2008: 40 full papers of 190 submissions
2007 Vienna University of Technology, Austria
Since 2007 the ARES conference was held in conjunction with the CISIS conference. In 2007 the keynotes of the ARES conference were held by:
- Prof. Reinhard Posch, Chief Information Officer for the Federal Republic of Austria
- Prof. Bhavani Thuraisingham, Director of Cyber Security Research Center, University of Texas at Dallas (UTD)
2006: Vienna University of Technology, Austria
The first ARES conference in 2006 was held in conjunction with the AINA conference. In 2006 the keynotes of the ARES conference were held by:
- Dr. Louis Marinos, ENISA Security Competence Department, Risk Management, Greece
- Prof. Andrew Steane, Centre for Quantium Computation, University of Oxford, UK
- Prof. David Basin, Information Security, Department of Computer Science, ETH Zurich, Switzerland