New Ideas in Networked Systems — 2027

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NINeS 2027: Call for Papers

The second edition of the New Ideas in Networked Systems (NINeS1), whose statement of purpose can be found here, hopes to bring together researchers and practitioners to discuss the intellectual foundations and the practical principles involved in designing future networked systems. Following the success of the first edition, NINeS 2027 will be a one-day online event on February 16, 2027.

We solicit full-length papers on networked systems that identify fundamental open questions, advocate approaches that significantly differ from common practice, re-frame or debunk current practice, or report on network measurements that identify unusual phenomena. NINeS takes a broad view of the scope of networked-systems research, including any work on networking or distributed systems. A good NINeS submission should:

To ensure that the reviewing load on the PC remains reasonable, the PC chairs may desk-reject papers which clearly do not fit these criteria or which address topics that the PC is unable to review with adequate expertise.

All accepted papers will appear in the NINeS proceedings and will be archived. Authors of accepted papers will be required to prepare a video that will be posted on the conference website prior to the actual conference, where conference participants can then engage the authors in an online Q&A. However, accepted papers will not be accompanied by talks at the conference, as we hope to organize the in-conference activities around a broader set of discussions.

Why should you submit to NINeS?

Our hope is that NINeS will be joining SIGCOMM and NSDI as a highly selective conference in the networked systems area, but it is being created with three important differences.

What to Submit

Submissions can be up to 12 pages in length, and must be in two-column format, using 10-point type on 12-point (single-spaced) leading, in a text block 7” wide x 9” deep, with 0.33” inter-column space, formatted for 8.5” x 11” paper. References and appendices do not count towards the 12 page limit, and additional pages may be used for both. A template can be downloaded here.

NINeS submissions are double-blind, and thus authors must make a good faith effort to anonymize papers. In particular, authors should not identify themselves either explicitly or by implication (e.g., through references or acknowledgments). However, only non-destructive anonymization is required. For example, system names may be left de-anonymized, if the system name is important for a reviewer to be able to evaluate the work. Submitted papers can be posted on Arxiv and authors may give talks about these, as long as they do not deliberately disclose information about the submission to PC members.

Ethical Policies and Concurrent Submissions

While NINeS is not an ACM conference, all submitted papers must adhere to ACM’s policies on research involving human participants. Furthermore, authors must attest that their work complies with all applicable ethical standards of their home institution(s), including but not limited to privacy policies and policies on experiments involving humans. Note that submitting research for approval by one’s institution’s ethics review body is necessary, but not sufficient – in cases where the PC has concerns about the ethics of the work in a submission, the PC will make its own decision about whether to publish the work. Authors must be available at any time during the review process to rapidly respond to queries from the PC chairs regarding ethical standards.

Concurrent submissions to NINeS and any other peer-reviewed venue that present the same work are prohibited, and will result in the immediate rejection of the NINeS submission. “Same” means substantially similar, regardless of the differences in length or level of detail. “Concurrent” means any other peer-reviewed venue whose reviewing period (i.e., the time between submission and notification) overlaps with that of NINeS. However, NINeS adopts the common practice that a NINeS submission may be based on an earlier position paper (e.g., one that appeared at HotNets) as long as the submissions are not concurrent and the incremental contribution over the previous publication is significant. In such “consecutive” rather than concurrent submissions, NINeS will follow the SIGCOMM standard that once the delta between the two works is determined to be sufficiently large, the NINeS submission will be evaluated on the total contribution of the paper rather than merely on the delta. Authors with questions about the concurrent submission policy are encouraged to contact the PC chairs prior to submitting.

The use of AI: We are all aware that the use of LLMs is transforming how we do research. There are some clearly acceptable uses (minor editorial help with the text) and some clearly unacceptable uses (pointing the LLM at some work on a topic and asking it to write a paper), but we as a community do not have enough experience with these technologies to make more precise policies. For NINeS, we want to gather more information about how you used LLMs in your work, so we have added some questions on the HotCRP submission form. The only requirement we have is that you honestly disclose how you used LLMs in your research. Thank you for your cooperation.

Submission site Coming soon
Registration Deadline July 30, 2026. AoE
Notification Deadline August 6, 2026. AoE

  1. The phrase “to the nines” is an idiom meaning “to the highest degree” or “to perfection”.↩︎