| I see. Now I get your comment, thanks. So you read "very low acceptance rates" to mean : "Alas, very few of our papers meet the criteria for publication". And hence the exhortation to produce novel, correct, and significant work if they want to get published. You couldn't be more wrong. The "very low acceptance rate" which the OP laments means the exact opposite of what you seem to have understood. Namely: In most of the better CS conferences and journals, the number of submissions which make or exceed the grade is so _large_ compared to the number of available slots for publication that a significant amount of "novel, correct, and significant" work has to be routinely rejected. Just because the conference/journal has its physical limitations. It is a problem of plenty, not of scarcity. As an example, see the Forward of the proceedings of last year's STACS [1] : "The STACS 2011 call for papers led to 271 submissions from 45 countries. ... there were intense and interesting discussions. The overall very high quality of the submissions made the selection a diļ¬cult task." And no, they are not saying this for form's sake. The story is similar for the other highly rated conferences. This is common knowledge in the respective communities, and often mentioned in the prefaces to their proceedings. This difficulty in getting _good_ work published of course has a deleterious impact on research and on the growth of the community, and the OP was lamenting _this_. At least this is the impression I got from reading "low acceptance rates". Off topic: STACS is one of the few CS conferences which publish their proceedings free online under a Creative Commons license. [1] http://drops.dagstuhl.de/opus/volltexte/2011/2993/pdf/1.pdf |