Ivan Damgård
Ivan Bjerre Damgård (born 1956) is a Danish cryptographer and currently a professor at the Department of Computer Science, Aarhus University, Denmark.
Ivan Bjerre Damgård | |
---|---|
Born | 1956 |
Nationality | Denmark |
Alma mater | Aarhus University |
Known for | |
Awards | IACR Fellow (2010) |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Cryptography |
Institutions | Department of Computer Science, Aarhus University |
Doctoral advisor | Peter Landrock |
Doctoral students | Lars Knudsen Ronald Cramer |
In 1983, he obtained a master's degree in mathematics (with minors in music and computer science) at Aarhus University. He began his PhD studies in 1985 at the same university, and was for a period a guest researcher at CWI in Amsterdam in 1987.[1] He earned his PhD degree in May, 1988, with the thesis Ubetinget beskyttelse i kryptografiske protokoller (Unconditional protection in cryptographic protocols) and has been employed at Aarhus University ever since. Damgård was made full professor in 2005.[2]
He is known among other things for the Merkle–Damgård construction used in most modern cryptographic hash functions such as SHA-1 and MD5. He discovered the structure independently of Ralph Merkle and published it in 1989.[3]
Ivan Damgård is also one of the founders of the Cryptomathic company. In 2010, he was selected as IACR Fellow.[4]
References
- "MC-00-23". Cryptographic Multiparty Protocols (5-day minicourse in 2001). Archived from the original on 2011-06-07. Retrieved 2010-06-05.
- "180705 - Ivan Damgård ny professor". (in Danish). Retrieved 2018-03-02.
- I. Damgård. A Design Principle for Hash Functions. In Advances in Cryptology - CRYPTO '89 Proceedings, Lecture Notes in Computer Science Vol. 435, G. Brassard, ed, Springer-Verlag, 1989, pp. 416-427.
- "2010 IACR Fellows". Retrieved 2010-06-05.