Moni Naor
Israeli computer scientist (born 1961)
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Moni Naor (Hebrew: מוני נאור) is an Israeli computer scientist, currently a professor at the Weizmann Institute of Science. Naor received his Ph.D. in 1989 at the University of California, Berkeley. His advisor was Manuel Blum.
Moni Naor | |
|---|---|
מוני נאור | |
Moni Naor at the DIMACS Workshop on Cryptography, July 2016. | |
| Born | 1961 (age 64–65) |
| Citizenship | Israeli |
| Alma mater | Technion University of California, Berkeley |
| Awards | Gödel Prize (2014) Paris Kanellakis Award (2016) |
| Scientific career | |
| Fields | Computer Science, Cryptography |
| Institutions | Weizmann Institute of Science |
| Doctoral advisor | Manuel Blum |
| Doctoral students | Yehuda Lindell Omer Reingold Kobbi Nissim |
He works in various fields of computer science, mainly the foundations of cryptography. He is notable for initiating research on public key systems secure against chosen ciphertext attack and creating non-malleable cryptography, visual cryptography (with Adi Shamir), and suggesting various methods for verifying that users of a computer system are human (leading to the notion of CAPTCHA).[1] His research on Small-bias sample space, give a general framework for combining small k-wise independent spaces with small -biased spaces to obtain -almost k-wise independent spaces of small size.[2] In 1994 he was the first, with Amos Fiat, to formally study the problem of practical broadcast encryption.[3] Along with Benny Chor, Amos Fiat, and Benny Pinkas, he made a contribution to the development of Traitor tracing, a copyright infringement detection system which works by tracing the source of leaked files rather than by direct copy protection.[4]
Bibliography
- Cynthia Dwork, Jeff Lotspiech and Moni Naor, Digital Signets: Self-Enforcing Protection of Digital Information.
- Dalit Naor, Moni Naor and Jeff Lotspiech, Revocation and Tracing Schemes for Stateless Receivers.
- David Chaum, Amos Fiat and Moni Naor, Untraceable Electronic Cash, 1990.[5]
- Amos Fiat and Moni Naor, Implicit O(1) Probe Search, SIAM J. Computing 22: 1-10 (1993).
- Amos Fiat and Moni Naor, Broadcast Encryption, 1994.[6]
- Moni Naor and Benny Pinkas, Threshold Traitor Tracing, Crypto 98.
- Moni Naor and Benny Pinkas, Efficient Trace and Revoke Schemes, FC'2000.
- Benny Chor, Amos Fiat, Moni Naor and Benny Pinkas, Tracing Traitors, IEEE Transactions on Information Theory, Vol. 46(3), pp. 893–910, 2000.[7]
Honors and awards
- 2008: Named an IACR fellow[8]
- 2014: The Gödel Prize (with co-authors)[9]
- 2016: The Paris Kanellakis Theory and Practice Award of the Association for Computing Machinery[10] (with Amos Fiat)
- 2022: The 30-year Test-of-Time STOC Award for his 1991 STOC paper “Non-Malleable Cryptography” (with Cynthia Dwork and Danny Dolev)[11]
- 2022: RSA Award for Excellence in Mathematics (with Cynthia Dwork)[12]
- 2024: Rothschild Prize in Computer Science for 2024[13]