 |
|
| |
|
 |
 |
at Global Oneness Community.
Share your dreams and let others help you with the interpretation!
Dream Sharing Forum
|
 |
List of cryptographers |  | List of cryptographers: Encyclopedia - List of cryptographers |  |
Cryptography
List of cryptographers - Pre-computer.
Charles Babbage, UK, 19th century mathematician who, about the time of the Crimean War, secretly developed an effective attack against polyalphabetic substitution ciphers. His development was published independently a few years later by Friedrich Kasiski, a Prussian officer. Babbage also designed, and had partially built, the first programmable digital computer, the Analytical Engine. He first designed and had partially bui ...
Including:
|  | | List of cryptographers, List of cryptographers - External link, List of cryptographers - Modern, List of cryptographers - Pre-19th century, List of cryptographers - Pre-computer, Cryptography |  | |
|  |  | List of cryptographers: Encyclopedia - List of cryptographers
List of cryptographers
List of cryptographers - Pre-19th century
- Leone Battista Alberti, polymath/universal genius, inventor of polyalphabetic substitution (see frequency analysis for the significance of this -- missed by most for a long time and 'dumbed down' in the Vigenère cipher), and what may have been the first mechanical encryption aid.
- Giovanni Battista della Porta, author of a seminal work on cryptanalysis.
- Julius Caesar, Roman general/politician/author/assassination victim, has the Caesar cipher is named after him, and a lost work on cryptography by Probus (probably Valerius Probus) is claimed to have covered his use of military cryptography in some detail. It is likely, however, that he did not invent the cypher named after him, as other substitution ciphers were in use well before his time.
- Johannes Trithemius, mystic and first to describe tableaux (tables) for use in polyalphabetic substitution. Wrote an early work on steganography and cryptography generally.
- Philips van Marnix, lord of Sint-Aldegonde, decyphered Spanish messages for William the Silent during the Dutch revolte against the Spanish.
Cryptography
List of cryptographers - Pre-computer
- Charles Babbage, UK, 19th century mathematician who, about the time of the Crimean War, secretly developed an effective attack against polyalphabetic substitution ciphers. His development was published independently a few years later by Friedrich Kasiski, a Prussian officer. Babbage also designed, and had partially built, the first programmable digital computer, the Analytical Engine. He first designed and had partially built the Difference engine for reduced errors in the preparation of mathematical tables -- specifically including navigational tables, thus accounting for the interest of the British Government in the project.
- Alistair Denniston, UK, director of GC&CS at Bletchley Park during WWII.
- Nigel de Grey, UK, member of the Room 40 British codebreaking team who played an important role in the decryption of the Zimmermann Telegram during WWI
- Elizebeth Friedman, US, wife of William F, and cryptographer in her own right for the Coast Guard, Treasury Department, and assorted other US Government agencies in the 1920s and 1930s. Co-author of the most respected book on cyphers in Shakespeare. The spelling of her name is correct with three 'e's.
- William F. Friedman, US, introduced statistical methods into cryptography; some would describe him as the founder of modern cryptography. Cryptography and genetics director at the Riverbank Laboratories before WWI, wrote extensively on cryptographic theory and practice, and became the US Army's chief (and for some time only) cryptographer, patented several cryptography related inventions some of which are still secret 60+ years later, including some aspects of the SIGABA machine. Co-author of the most respected book on cyphers in Shakespeare.
- Friedrich Kasiski, author of the first published attack on the Vigenère cipher, now known as the Kasiski test (although Charles Babbage discovered a similar attack a few years earlier -- his work was not published).
- Auguste Kerckhoffs, whose design principles have become axioms.
- Dilwyn Knox, UK, Classics scholar and eccentric; WWI Room 40 member who stayed with cryptography between the Wars, becoming the chief cryptanalyst of the GC&CS before WWII. Broke commercial Enigma. Famous for solving problems in the bath.
- Solomon Kullback, US, one of William Friedman's first three employees at the SIS in the 30's.
- Leo Marks, UK, World War II cryptographer and SOE cryptography director, playwright, author of Between Silk and Cyanide.
- Marian Rejewski: Polish mathematician-cryptologist who first broke German Enigma ciphers in December 1932, laying the foundations for Polish Enigma decryption with his colleagues Jerzy Różycki and Henryk Zygalski, and subsequently for British Enigma decryption ("Ultra") during World War II at Bletchley Park. Reconstructed the Enigma machine; invented the cyclometer and the card catalog produced by it, and the cryptologic bomb.
- John Joseph Rochefort, US, mustang Navy officer (ie, ex enlisted) who early specialized in cryptography and languages, following Safford. A Japanese speaker. Became director of Station Hypo in Hawaii which made major contributions to the break into JN-25 after the attack on Pearl Harbor which led to the successful ambush at Midway. Casualty of power struggle within USN cryptography organization, was forced out of cryptography, and finished WWII in command of a dry dock in California. Honored posthumously for his Hawaiian cryptography work.
- Frank Rowlett, US, leader of the team that broke Purple, contributor to the design of SIGABA. One of William Friedman's first three employees at the SIS.
- Jerzy Różycki: Polish mathematician-cryptologist, Marian Rejewski's colleague in decrypting German Enigma ciphers. Devised the "clock" method for determining which rotor was in the far-right position.
- Claude Elwood Shannon, US, founded the modern theory of cryptography (ca. WW II), proved the one-time pad to be unbreakable, founded and invented/developed information theory and major aspects of communication theory, one of the principal developers of the theory of error-correcting codes (with Richard Hamming), made major advances in logic circuit design in his Master's thesis.
- Laurance Safford, US, chief cryptographer for the US Navy for 2 decades+. Also its first. Pioneered what became OP-20-G in WWII. One of the first Japanese speaking officers in the US Navy.
- Abraham Sinkov, US, one of William Freidman's first three employees at the SIS in the 1930s.
- John Tiltman, UK, British Army officer from Scotland, talented cryptographer/cryptanalyst. Contributed significantly before WWII in the era of hand cryptanalysis and during/after WW II in the era of machine assisted cryptanalysis. Worked at Bletchley Park and GCHQ.
- Alan Mathison Turing, UK, one of the most original minds of the 20th century and one the chief cryptographers at Bletchley Park during World War II. Made major contributions to the theory of computation, and can even be regarded as its originator. Made major contributions to the engineering design and development of early computer hardware and software at the NPL and later at the University of Manchester.
- William Tutte, UK, Tutte worked at Bletchley Park and deduced the structure of the German Lorenz SZ 40/42 encryption machine (codenamed Tunny), thereby allowing the British to read the messages sent in this system using the Colossus computer.
- Gordon Welchman, UK; during World War II, head of Bletchley Park's Hut Six (German Army and Air Force cipher decryption). Made major contributions to Enigma decryption.
- Sir Charles Wheatstone, inventor or the so-called Playfair cipher and general polymath.
- Herbert Yardley, US, best known for his book "The American Black Chamber". Gambler, raconteur, roving cryptographer for hire (eg, Canada, Japan) after MI8 was closed.
- Henryk Zygalski: Polish mathematician-cryptologist, Marian Rejewski's colleague in decrypting German Enigma ciphers. Invented the perforated-sheets ("Zygalski sheets") technique.
List of cryptographers - Modern
- Leonard Adleman, US, the 'A' in RSA, now at the University of Southern California. Has done pioneering work in DNA computing.
- Ross Anderson, UK, Cambridge University Professor, Department Director, author of many books and articles who has done important work on several aspects of cryptography and information security, including analysis of trusted computing devices, security of bank systems, robustness of protocols, steganography, "Soft TEMPEST"; cryptanalysed a number of algorithms; designed several including co-designing Serpent (an AES finalist) and Tiger a message digest algorithm. See http://www.cl.cam.ac.uk/users/rja14
- Paulo S. L. M. Barreto, Brazil, co-author with Vincent Rijmen of the Whirlpool hash function; efficient algorithms for pairing-based cryptosystems.
- Mihir Bellare, US, Random oracles, provable security
- Daniel J. Bernstein, US, got US regulations on control of software cryptography code changed in Bernstein v. United States and also proposed interesting ideas for the factorization of large composite numbers, the goal being to break bigger RSA keys. See http://cr.yp.to/djb.html
- George Blakley, US, independent inventor of secret sharing
- Matt Blaze, US, demonstrated a security problem with the NSA Clipper chip design, published a description of a (long known 'to the trade') security problem with master keying of physical locks, and designed and implemented the Cryptographic File System for the Unix Operating System. See http://www.crypto.com
- Dan Boneh, Israel and US ?, Associate Professor, Applied Cryptography Group, Computer Science and Electrical Engineering, Stanford University. With G. Durfee, coauthor of the Cryptanalysis of RSA with private key d less than N^0.292. See http://crypto.stanford.edu/~dabo/
- Gilles Brassard, CAN, Professor Computer Science, Université de Montréal. Co-invented quantum cryptography amongst much other work. See http://www.iro.umontreal.ca/~brassard
- David Chaum, US. Author of work on anonymity systems, blind signatures.
- Don Coppersmith, US, one of the IBM team which designed the entry in the NBS competition which resulted in (after NSA / NBS modification) the Data Encryption Standard
- Claude Crépeau, CAN, Professor in Computer Science at McGill University. Zero-knowledge proofs, multi-party computations, oblivious transfer, quantum information theory. See http://crypto.cs.mcgill.ca/~crepeau
- Joan Daemen, Belgian, co-developer of Rijndael which became the AES encryption algorithm. Prolific developer of cryptographic algorithms.
- Whitfield Diffie, US, one of the (public) inventors of public-key cryptography and co-inventor of the Diffie-Hellman protocol.
- James Ellis, UK, staff member of GCHQ who proved the possibility of 'non-secret' encryption. That proof led Clifford Cocks to invent (first) what has become known as the RSA encryption algorithm, and Malcolm Williamson (note: not the composer) to invent (first) what has become known as the Diffie-Hellman protocol.
- Taher Elgamal, US (born Egyptian), inventor of the Elgamal discrete log cryptosystem, and chief designer of the SSL protocol while at Netscape Communications Corporation
- Horst Feistel, US. Involved in early work on block ciphers at IBM, including Lucifer, DES, SP-networks and Feistel networks.
- Ian Goldberg, US, broke many cryptosystems with David Wagner.
- Oded Goldreich, Israel, Professor of Computer Science at Weizmann Institute, author of Foundations of Cryptography, a theoretical textbook, has researched many theoretical issues in cryptography.
- Shafi Goldwasser, US and Israel, Professor of Computer Science at MIT and Weizmann Institute, one of the discoverers of zero-knowledge proofs and probabilistic encryption.
- Lars Knudsen, Denmark, designed and analysed a large number of symmetric algorithms.
- Neal Koblitz, creator of hyperelliptic curve cryptography and independent co-creator of elliptic curve cryptography.
- Paul Kocher, US, discovered differential power analysis and designed SSLv3 See http://www.cryptography.com
- Mitsuru Matsui, Japan, discovered linear cryptanalysis, and helped design the MISTY-1, MISTY-2 and Camellia algorithms.
- Alfred Menezes, co-inventor of MQV, co-author of 'Handbook of Applied Cryptography', managing director of Centre for Applied Cryptographic Research, early editor of IEEE 1363 standard.
- Silvio Micali, US (born Italian), Professor of Computer Science at MIT, and one of the discoverers of zero-knowledge proofs and probabilistic encryption.
- Victor S. Miller, independent co-creator of elliptic curve cryptography.
- Bart Preneel, co-author of RIPEMD-160. See http://www.esat.kuleuven.ac.be/~preneel
- Charles Rackoff, US and CAN, Professor in Computer Science at University of Toronto. Co-author of The Knowledge Complexity of Interactive Proof Systems with Shafi Goldwasser and Silvio Micali. See http://www.cs.toronto.edu/DCS/People/Faculty/rackoff.html
- Vincent Rijmen, Belgian, co-developer of Rijndael which became the AES algorithm. See http://www.esat.kuleuven.ac.be/~rijmen
- Ronald L. Rivest, US, the 'R' in RSA, Professor at MIT and prolific crypto algorithm inventor. See http://theory.lcs.mit.edu/~rivest/
- Philip Rogaway, US, Random oracles, provable security.
- Adi Shamir, Israel, the 'S' in RSA now at Weizmann Institute, Israel. A prolific inventor of crypto algorithms, protocols, and cryptanalytic techniques.
- Bruce Schneier, US, CTO and founder of Counterpane Internet Security, Inc., one of the developers of Twofish, an AES contest finalist, several other encryption algorithms, a random number generator or two, etc. Author of Crypto-Gram a monthly newsletter on cryptography topics and several influential books. See http://www.counterpane.com (Counterpane Internet Security, Inc.) or http://www.schneier.com/ (personal website),
- David Wagner, US, discovered attacks on many widely deployed algorithms and was one of the developers of Twofish, an AES contest finalist
- Xiaoyun Wang, China, one of the authors of the most successful breaks on commonly used hash like MD5 and SHA-1. See http://www.infosec.sdu.edu.cn/people/wangxiaoyun.htm
- Scott Vanstone, Canada, founder of Certicom and a proponent of Elliptic Curve Cryptography, and one of the authors of the Handbook of Applied Cryptography.
See also
List of cryptographers - External link
- List of cryptographers' home pages
Categories: Cryptographers | Lists of people by occupation
Other related archives1920s, 1930s, 1932, 19th century, AES, Abraham Sinkov, Adi Shamir, Alan Mathison Turing, Analytical Engine, Auguste Kerckhoffs, Bart Preneel, Bernstein v. United States, Bletchley Park, Bruce Schneier, Caesar cipher, Camellia, Centre for Applied Cryptographic Research, Certicom, Charles Babbage, Charles Wheatstone, Claude Crépeau, Claude Elwood Shannon, Clifford Cocks, Clipper chip, Coast Guard, Colossus computer, Counterpane Internet Security, Inc., Crimean War, Cryptographers, Cryptography, DES, DNA computing, Daniel J. Bernstein, Data Encryption Standard, David Chaum, David Wagner, December, Denmark, Difference engine, Diffie-Hellman, Dilwyn Knox, Don Coppersmith, Elgamal discrete log cryptosystem, Elizebeth Friedman, Elliptic Curve Cryptography, Enigma, Enigma machine, Feistel networks, Frank Rowlett, Friedrich Kasiski, GC&CS, GCHQ, George Blakley, German, Gilles Brassard, Giovanni Battista della Porta, Gordon Welchman, Henryk Zygalski, Herbert Yardley, Horst Feistel, IBM, Ian Goldberg, JN-25, James Ellis, Jerzy Różycki, Joan Daemen, Johannes Trithemius, John Joseph Rochefort, John Tiltman, Julius Caesar, Kasiski test, Lars Knudsen, Laurance Safford, Leo Marks, Leonard Adleman, Leone Battista Alberti, Lists of people by occupation, Lucifer, MD5, MI8, MISTY-1, MIT, MQV, Marian Rejewski, Matt Blaze, McGill University, Mitsuru Matsui, NBS, NPL, NSA, Neal Koblitz, Netscape Communications Corporation, Oded Goldreich, Operating System, Paul Kocher, Paulo S. L. M. Barreto, Philips van Marnix, lord of Sint-Aldegonde, Playfair cipher, Polish, Purple, RSA, Richard Hamming, Rijndael, Ronald L. Rivest, Room 40, Ross Anderson, SHA-1, SIGABA, SIS, SOE, SP-networks, SSL, SSLv3, Scott Vanstone, Serpent, Shafi Goldwasser, Shakespeare, Silvio Micali, Solomon Kullback, TEMPEST, Taher Elgamal, Tiger, Twofish, UK, Ultra, University of Manchester, University of Southern California, University of Toronto, Université de Montréal, Unix, Vigenère cipher, Vincent Rijmen, Weizmann Institute, Whirlpool hash function, Whitfield Diffie, William F. Friedman, William Tutte, William the Silent, World War II, Xiaoyun Wang, Zimmermann Telegram, assassination, attack on Pearl Harbor, author, card catalog, cipher, ciphers, clock, communication theory, composite numbers, contest, cryptanalysis, cryptography, cryptologic bomb, cryptologist, cyclometer, decryption, differential power analysis, elliptic curve cryptography, error-correcting codes, frequency analysis, general, genius, hash, hyperelliptic curve cryptography, information theory, linear cryptanalysis, lost work, mathematician, one-time pad, perforated-sheets, politician, polyalphabetic substitution, polymath, probabilistic encryption, protocol, protocols, public-key cryptography, random number generator, secret sharing, steganography, substitution ciphers, symmetric algorithms, trusted computing devices
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "List of cryptographers", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |
|
|
More material related to List Of Cryptographers can be found here:
|
|
« Back
|
Search the Global Oneness web site |
|
|
|
|
 |
Sneak-Peek of Global Oneness Community
Hi friend! The Global Oneness Community, the place for information and sharing about Oneness is not really launched yet (you will see there is still some clean up to do) ...but it is now open for a sneak-peek! And if you wish - please register and become one of the very first members to do so! Jonas
Forum Home,
Articles,
Photo Gallery,
Videos,
News,
Sitemap
...and much more!
|