Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. Bailey Whitfield 'Whit' Diffie ForMemRS (born June 5, 1944) is an American cryptographer and mathematician and one of the pioneers of public-key cryptography along with Martin Hellman and Ralph Merkle.

  2. Bailey Whitfield 'Whit' Diffie (Washington, D.C., 5 de junho de 1944) é um matemático e criptógrafo estadunidense. Pioneiro em criptografia de chave pública. [1] Formado pelo Instituto de Tecnologia de Massachusetts (MIT) e entusiasta da contracultura, ele se interessava muito pela criptografia.

  3. Public-key cryptography pioneer Bailey Whitfield (“Whit”) Diffie was born in 1944 in Washington, D.C. His father, Bailey Wally Diffie was a professor specializing in Iberian history at City College of New York.

  4. 1 de dez. de 2019 · History. Computer People. Bailey Diffie. Updated: 12/01/2019 by Computer Hope. Name: Bailey Whitfield (Whit) Diffie. Born: June 5, 1944, in Washington, D.C. Computer-related contributions. American cryptographer and one of the pioneers of public-key cryptography.

  5. 27 de out. de 2023 · Biography. Whitfield Diffie was born on 5 June 1944 in Washington, D.C. to Bailey Wallys Diffie, a professor of history at the City College of New York, and Justine Louise Whitfield, a writer and expert on Madame de Sévigné. Diffie was raised in an upper middle class, Jewish immigrant neighborhood of Queens, a community which was ...

  6. 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 ...

  7. www.computerhistory.org › profile › whitfield-diffieWhitfield Diffie - CHM

    6 de mar. de 2024 · Whitfield Diffie was born in Washington, DC, in 1944. He studied mathematics at MIT, receiving a BS in 1965. On graduation, Diffie became an employee of the MITRE Corporation until 1969, when he joined the Stanford University AI lab to work with its director, John McCarthy, on proof of correctness of computer programs.