Gustavus Simmons

Cryptographer, Person

1930 –

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Who is Gustavus Simmons?

Gustavus J. Simmons is a retired cryptographer and former manager of the applied mathematics Department and Senior Fellow at Sandia National Laboratories. He has worked primarily with authentication theory, developing cryptographic techniques for solving problems of mutual distrust and in devising protocols whose function can be trusted, even though some of the inputs or participants cannot be. Simmons was born in West Virginia and was named after his grandfather, a prohibition officer who was gunned down three years before Gustavus was born. He began his post-secondary education at Deep Springs College, and he received his Ph.D in mathematics from the University of New Mexico, Albuquerque.

Simmons has published over 170 papers, many of which are devoted to asymmetric encryption techniques. His technical contributions include the development of subliminal channels which make it possible to conceal covert communications in digital signatures and the mathematical formulation of an authentication channel paralleling in many respects the secrecy channel formulated by Claude Shannon in 1948. In the 1980s, he helped form the International Association for Cryptologic Research. He is also the creator of the Ramsey/graph theory-based mathematical game Sim.

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Born
1930
United States of America
Nationality
  • United States of America
Profession
Education
  • University of New Mexico

Submitted
on July 23, 2013

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