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  1. CITATION. Together with Leonard M. Adleman and Ronald Rivest, for their ingenious contribution to making public-key cryptography useful in practice. Short Annotated. Bibliography. ACM Turing Award. Lecture Video. Research. Subjects. Additional. Materials. Adi Shamir is an internationally recognized cryptographer.

  2. Visual cryptography. Visual cryptography is a cryptographic technique which allows visual information (pictures, text, etc.) to be encrypted in such a way that the decrypted information appears as a visual image. One of the best-known techniques has been credited to Moni Naor and Adi Shamir, who developed it in 1994. [1]

  3. Apr 25, 2024 · Elected. 2022. International Honorary Member. Adi Shamir is Paul and Marlene Borman Professorial Chair of Applied Mathematics at Weizmann Institute of Science. He is a pioneer of modern cryptography and has made significant contributions to many of its branches.

  4. www.wisdom.weizmann.ac.il › profile › scientistsAdi Shamir

    Adi Shamir. The Paul and Marlene Borman Professor of Applied Mathematics. My main area of research is cryptography making and breaking codes. It is motivated by the explosive growth of computer networks and wireless communication.

  5. awards.acm.org › award-recipients › shamir_2327856Adi Shamir - Awards Home

    Leonard M. Adleman, Ronald R. Rivest and Adi Shamir have been selected for their role in the creation of the world's most widely used public-key cryptography system, which has become known by their initials, RSA. Their work was a significant advance in enabling secure communication among computers using public-key cryptography. Today, the RSA ...

  6. / Fellows Directory. Professor Adi Shamir ForMemRS. Professor Adi Shamir was born in Israel in 1952, and received his PhD from the Weizmann Institute of Science in 1977. He is one of the founders of modern cryptography, and had made significant contributions to many of its branches.

  7. Jan 22, 2019 · Professor Shamir is well known for his contributions to cryptography. In 1977 he invented, with Rivest and Adleman, the first practical public key cryptosystem, and in 1982 he cracked the knapsack cryptosystem developed by Merkle and Hellman from Stanford University.

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