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  1. Martin Hellman. 职 业. 密码学和网络安全技术专家. 主要成就. 获得2015年度图灵奖. 主要成就. 2016年2月,获得2015年度图灵奖。. [1] 迪菲与赫尔曼1976年发表了论文《密码学新动向》(New Directions in Cryptography),在其中阐述了关于公开密钥加密算法的新构想,即在一个 ...

  2. Stanford Professor Martin Hellman is best known for his invention (joint with Whitfield Diffie and Ralph Merkle) of public key cryptography, the technology that protects trillions of dollars every day. This work won him the ACM Turing Award, sometimes thought of as “the Nobel Prize in Computer Science.”. Professor Hellman also has a deep ...

  3. 22 de nov. de 2004 · Leading cryptography scholar Martin Hellman begins by discussing his developing interest in cryptography, factors underlying his decision to do academic research in this area, and the circumstances and fundamental insights of his invention of public key cryptography with collaborators Whitfield Diffie and Ralph Merkle at Stanford University in the mid-1970s.

  4. Martin Edward Hellman ( New York, 2 ottobre 1945) è un informatico e crittografo statunitense . È noto per gli studi sulla crittografia che ha condotto nei primi anni settanta insieme a Whitfield Diffie e Ralph Merkle. Nel 1976 ha pubblicato, insieme a loro, New Directions in Cryptography, un articolo che esponeva un nuovo metodo per la ...

  5. 26 de ago. de 2022 · In the mid-1970s, Whitfield Diffie and Martin Hellman invented public key cryptography, an innovation that ultimately changed the world. Today public key cryptography provides the primary basis for secure communication over the internet, enabling online work, socializing, shopping, government services, and much more.

  6. 1 de mar. de 2016 · In the 1970s, Martin Hellman and a team of colleagues at Stanford invented public key cryptography, the technology that enables today’s electronic commerce and secure private communications. In the process, Hellman ran afoul of the National Security Agency, but in the long run prevailed.

  7. Martin E. Hellman is Professor Emeritus of Electrical Engineering at Stanford University and is affiliated with Stanford’s Center for International Security and Cooperation (CISAC). His recent technical work has focused on bringing a risk-informed framework to a potential failure of nuclear deterrence and then using that approach to find surprising ways to reduce the risk.