Skip to content

Home

Simons Institute for the Theory of Computing

Search form

  • Home
  • About
    • Overview
    • Contact
    • Calvin Lab
  • People
    • Overview
    • Scientific Leadership
    • Staff
    • Current Long-Term Visitors
    • Research Fellows
    • Scientific Advisory Board
    • Governance Board
    • Affiliated Faculty
    • Science Communicator in Residence
    • Law and Society Fellow
  • Programs & Events
    • Overview
    • Programs
    • Workshops & Symposia
    • Research Pods
    • Internal Program Activities
    • Public Lectures
    • Participate
  • Visiting
    • Overview
    • Directions
    • Berkeley & the Bay Area
    • Accommodation
    • Visas
    • Families
    • IT Guide
    • Bicycle Loans
    • Code of Conduct
  • Support
    • Overview
    • Simons Foundation
    • Industrial Partnership
    • Academic Partners
    • Donate
    • Richard M. Karp Fund
  • Watch / Read
    • SimonsTV
    • Program Reports
    • News Stories
    • Calvin Café (blog)
  • Calendar

You are here

  1. ‹ Home

Historical Papers in Cryptography Seminar Series

This series of talks, held during the Summer 2015 program on Cryptography, highlights papers of historical significance to the field. Follow the links below to find abstracts, archived video, and slides for each individual talk.

  • On the Growth of Cryptography, Ronald L. Rivest (Massachusetts Institute of Technology)
  • Quantum and Post-Quantum Cryptography, Umesh Vazirani (UC Berkeley)
  • Black-Box Seperations, Russell Impaliazzo (UC San Diego)
  • Lattice Cryptography, Daniele Macciancio (UC San Diego)
  • Pairings in Cryptography, Dan Boneh (Stanford University)
  • Zero Knowledge Probabilistic Proof Systems, Shafi Goldwasser (Massachusetts Institute of Technology)
  • HMAC and Other Stories from the Real World, Hugo Krawczyk (IBM Research)
  • Non-Malleable Cryptography, Cynthia Dwork (Microsoft Research)
  • Hash Proof Systems, Old and New, Victor Shoup (New York University)

Privacy Terms of Use Contact Subscribe

© 2013–2020 Simons Institute for the Theory of Computing. All Rights Reserved. ^ top