Shafi Goldwasser

[7][8][9][10][11] Born in New York City, Goldwasser obtained her bachelor's degree in 1979 in mathematics and science from Carnegie Mellon.[14] Since November 2016, Goldwasser has been the chief scientist and co-founder of Duality Technologies, a US-based start-up which offers secure data analytics using advanced cryptographic techniques.Goldwasser is a co-inventor of zero-knowledge proofs, which probabilistically and interactively demonstrate the validity of an assertion without conveying any additional knowledge, and are a key tool in the design of cryptographic protocols.[20] Her work in number theory includes the invention with Joe Kilian of primality proving using elliptic curves.In 2001 she was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and in 2002 she gave a plenary lecture at the International Congress of Mathematicians in Beijing.
New York CityCarnegie Mellon UniversityUniversity of California, BerkeleyZero-knowledge proofProbabilistic encryptionBlum–Goldwasser cryptosystemGoldwasser–Micali cryptosystemNir ShavitGrace Murray Hopper AwardGödel PrizeMember of the National Academy of SciencesIEEE Emanuel R. Piore AwardBBVA AwardRSA Mathematics AwardLoreal Unesco Women in Science AwardTuring AwardSuffrage Science awardACM FellowAAAS FellowComputer sciencecryptographyMassachusetts Institute of TechnologyWeizmann InstituteSimons InstituteBerkeleyThesisDoctoral advisorManuel BlumElette BoyleJohan HåstadYael Tauman KalaiTal MalkinAmit SahaiSalil VadhanVinod VaikuntanathanHebrewWeizmann Institute of ScienceSimons Institute for the Theory of ComputingCarnegie MellonBlum-Goldwasser cryptosystemtheory of computationMIT Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence LaboratoryNational Academy of EngineeringAlgorandblockchaincomputational complexity theorycomputational number theoryzero-knowledge proofscryptographic protocolsProject CETISilvio Micalitheoretical computer scienceACM Grace Murray Hopper AwardRSA Award for Excellence in MathematicsAmerican Academy of Arts and SciencesNational Academy of SciencesThe Franklin Institute2010 Benjamin Franklin MedalUniversity of OxfordInfosys PrizeL’Oréal-UNESCO for Women in Science AwardMathematics Genealogy ProjectMicali, S.Rivest, R. L.SIAM Journal on ComputingCiteSeerXCharles RackoffScopusNational Geographic SocietyAssociation for Computing MachineryFeige, U.Lovász, L.Safra, S.Szegedy, M.Journal of the ACMGoldreich, OdedMicaliRackoffHåstadImmermanSzelepcsényiJerrumSinclairHalpernWolperLovászMotwaniSzegedySénizerguesFreundSchapireHerlihyShavitZaharoglouMatiasAgrawalSaxenaRazborovRudichSpielmanReingoldVadhanWigdersonMitchellKoutsoupiasPapadimitriouRoughgardenÉ. TardosFranklinO'HearnMcSherryNissimG. TardosBrakerskiGentryVaikuntanathanDirksenLathwellScherrShortliffeKurzweilWozniakMetcalfeBricklinIngallsOusterhoutSteeleHillisStallmanStroustrupKavrakiNeculaSrikantKecklerRexfordPaxsonEnglerCasadoKatabiFelzenszwalbRatnasamyWatersRandlesDaskalakisFreedmanBalcanA. M. Turing AwardlaureatesAlan PerlisMaurice Vincent WilkesRichard HammingMarvin MinskyJames H. WilkinsonJohn McCarthyEdsger W. DijkstraCharles BachmanDonald KnuthAllen NewellHerbert A. SimonMichael O. RabinDana ScottJohn BackusRobert W. FloydKenneth E. IversonTony HoareEdgar F. CoddStephen CookKen ThompsonDennis RitchieNiklaus WirthRichard KarpJohn HopcroftRobert TarjanJohn CockeIvan SutherlandWilliam KahanFernando J. CorbatóRobin MilnerButler LampsonJuris HartmanisRichard E. StearnsEdward FeigenbaumRaj ReddyAmir PnueliDouglas EngelbartJim GrayFred BrooksAndrew YaoOle-Johan DahlKristen NygaardRon RivestAdi ShamirLeonard AdlemanAlan KayVint CerfBob KahnPeter NaurFrances AllenEdmund M. ClarkeE. Allen EmersonJoseph SifakisBarbara LiskovCharles P. ThackerLeslie G. ValiantJudea PearlLeslie LamportMichael StonebrakerMartin HellmanWhitfield DiffieTim Berners-LeeJohn L. HennessyDavid PattersonYoshua BengioGeoffrey HintonYann LeCunEd CatmullPat HanrahanAlfred AhoJeffrey UllmanJack DongarraRobert MetcalfeAvi Wigderson