Hasso Plattner Institute & University of Potsdam
Title: “Detecting potential side-channel security issues in cryptographic implementations”
Max Planck Institute for Security and Privacy & Radboud University
Title: “Formosa Crypto: high-assurance, high-security crypto software”
Cryptographic implementations that protect critical assets, such as payment systems and secure communications, are subject to strict certification requirements across many industry sectors. However, security against physical attacks, such as side-channel and fault attacks, remains a fundamental challenge. Despite the strong theoretical foundations of masking, real-world implementations frequently fail to meet their expected security levels. This gap arises from mismatches between abstract security models and the physical realities of hardware, including microarchitectural effects. As a result, secure implementations must be carefully tailored to specific platforms, requiring deep expertise in both cryptography and hardware behavior. Formal methods offer mathematical guarantees under simplified assumptions, while practical evaluation captures real-world leakage but provides only partial assurance. ACTIVE welcomes contributions in this area that address aspects of formal verification, practical evaluation, or the gap between them.
ACTIVE welcomes submissions on any aspects of technologies that can be used for the verification of cryptographic implementations. Topics of interest include, but are not limited to:
Submitted papers must be written in English and be anonymous, with no author names, affiliations, acknowledgments, or any identifying citations. Papers should begin with a title, a short abstract, and a list of keywords.
Author instructions for paper submission are on the CCS submissions page: https://www.sigsac.org/ccs/CCS2026/