Technology Review - Published By MIT
Advertisement
TR35

2007 Young Innovator

Tadayoshi Kohno, 29

University of Washington

Securing systems cryptographically

Courtesy Tadayoshi Kohno

Our reliance on the Internet is increasing all the time. Tadayosh­i Kohno, an assistant professor of computer science and engineering, worries that even if our data is encrypted, hackers can still glean information about us by working around the codes. For instance, someone tapping into your system might not be able to view the movie you're watching but could guess its title from properties such as the file size and the compression algorithm used.


So Kohno invented the concept of systems-oriented provable security. Traditionally, cryptologists have assumed that a security protocol is unbreakable if no one they show it to can crack it. But with provable security, they use sophisticated math to show that cracking a given code would require someone to decipher a cryptographic "building block" that's known to be secure.


Kohno extended this technique to the system level, examining everything from the software that compresses a file to the Internet protocols used to send it. He searches for weak points that might leak identifying information and writes provably secure algorithms to protect them. One of his schemes can handle data transmitted at 10 gigabits per second, the new Internet standard--a rate that overwhelmed previous security protocols. The U.S. government is incorporating a derivative of the scheme into an official encryption standard; Kohno anticipates that banks and corporate networks will use it as well.


--Neil Savage

 
 
TR35 Back to all TR35 2007 Winners   TR35 2007 Infotech Winners     
Sanjit Biswas
Cheap, easy Internet access
Josh Bongard
Adaptive robots
Garrett Camp
Discovering more of the Web
Mung Chiang
Optimizing networks
Tadayoshi Kohno
Securing systems cryptographically
Tariq Krim
Building a personal, dynamic Web page

Ivan Krstic´
Making antivirus software obsolete
Jeff LaPorte
Internet-based calling from mobile phones
Karen Liu
Bringing body language to computer-animated characters
Anna Lysyanskaya
Securing online privacy
Tapan Parikh
Simple, powerful mobile tools for developing economies
Babak Parviz
Self-assembling micromachines
Partha Ranganathan
Power-aware computing systems

Kevin Rose
Online social bookmarking
Marc Sciamanna
Controlling chaos in telecom lasers
Desney Tan
Teaching computers to read minds
Luis von Ahn
Using “captchas” to digitize books
Mark Zuckerberg
Circle of friends

Comments

Advertisement
MIT Massachusetts Institute of Technology © 2009 Technology Review. All Rights Reserved.