Stanford EE Computer Systems Colloquium

4:15PM, Wednesday, Feb 08, 2012
Skilling Auditorium, Stanford Campus
http://ee380.stanford.edu

Hummingbird: A rotor-machine for the 21st Century

Whitfield Diffie
Chief Cryptographer
Revere Security
About the talk:

Rotor machines--cryptographic machines that scramble the text through a sequence of rotating wired wheels--dominated cryptography from the end of World War I until the 1950s, when they were supplanted at first by shift registers and then by block ciphers. Although out of favor for several decades, rotor techniques have advantages in environments like radio frequency identification ("RFID") and wireless sensor networks in which power is scarce.

Slides:

There is no downloadable version of the slides for this talk available at this time.

About the speaker:

[speaker photo] Bailey Whitfield 'Whit' Diffie (born June 5, 1944) is an American cryptographer and one of the pioneers of public-key cryptography.

Diffie and Martin Hellman's paper "New Directions in Cryptography" published in 1976. introduced a radically new method of distributing cryptographic keys that went far toward solving one of the fundamental problems of cryptography, key distribution. It has become known as Diffie–Hellman key exchange. The article also seems to have stimulated the almost immediate public development of a new class of encryption algorithms, the asymmetric key algorithms, which enable public key encryption.

After a long career at Sun Microsystems, where he became a Sun Fellow, Diffie is currently serving as the Vice President for Information Security and Cryptography at the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) and a visiting scholar at the Freeman Spogli Institute's Center for International Security and Cooperation at Stanford University. He also serves as Chief Cryptographer for Revere Security.

[Adapted from the Whitfield Diffie Wikipedia entry.

Contact information:

Whitfield Diffie