Submissions must be original, anonymized for double-blind review, and follow the IEEE EuroS&P Workshops formatting requirements.
Papers must be typeset in LaTeX in A4 format (not "US Letter") using the IEEE conference proceeding template we supply eurosp2026-template.zip. Please do not use other IEEE templates. Submissions must be in Portable Document Format (.pdf). Authors should pay special attention to unusual fonts, images, and figures that might create problems for reviewers. Your document should render correctly in Adobe Reader and when printed in black and white. Failure to adhere to the page limit and formatting requirements can be grounds for rejection without review.
Page limits include all content and references. At least one author of each accepted paper must register and present at the workshop.
We invite the following two types of papers:
Regular papers (limited to 10 pages, including all text, figures, and references): Full research papers that describe novel contributions to the state-of-the-art, reporting on work or experiences in industry or industrial-relevant case or field studies;
Short papers (limited to 6 pages, including all text, figures, and references): Position/Work-in-progress research papers that describe promising preliminary results, approaches, ideas, or challenging issues for application in the industry
Each contribution must be associated with one full conference registration; only one contribution can be associated with each registration. Registered participants are expected to attend the conference.
The use of AI-generated content (including but not limited to text, figures, images, and code) shall be disclosed in the acknowledgments section. At the time of submission, the acknowledgments do not count towards the page limit. The AI system used shall be identified, and specific sections of the article that use AI-generated content shall be identified and accompanied by a brief explanation regarding the level at which the AI system was used to generate the content.
The use of AI systems for editing and grammar enhancement is common practice and, as such, is generally outside the intent of the above policy. In this case, disclosure as noted above is not required, but recommended.
Our expectation for Euro S&P Workshop (SCID) is that researchers will maximize the scientific and community value of their work by making it as open as possible. This means that, by default, all of the code, data, and other materials (such as survey instruments) needed to reproduce your work described in an accepted paper will be released publicly under an open source license. Sometimes it is not possible to share work this openly, such as when it involves malware samples, data from human subjects that must be protected, or proprietary data obtained under agreement that precludes publishing the data itself. All submissions are encouraged to include a clear statement on Data Availability that explains how the artifacts needed to reproduce their work will be shared, or an explanation of why they will not be shared. If data reproducibility is required for significant contributions of the work and the authors do not explain reproducibility and/or share the artifacts, papers that fail to satisfy these commitments may be removed from the conference.
We expect authors to carefully consider and address the potential harms associated with carrying out their research, as well as the potential negative consequences that could stem from publishing their work. Failure to adequately discuss such potential harms within the body of the submission may result in rejection of a submission, regardless of its quality and scientific value.
TBA