How to Keep a Secret
by Professor Fred Piper

 
 


Speaker:


Professor Fred PIPER

Professor, Information Security Group
Royal Holloway (University of London)

Date:

Time:

Venue:

08 March 2007 (Thursday)

7:30 - 9:30 pm

Conference Hall 2
School of Accountancy
Singapore Management University

We hope to see you there!
Please register online by 05 Mar 2007.

Synopsis

Cryptography is the study of message secrecy. One of cryptography's primary purposes is hiding the meaning of messages. While modern day cryptography provides the foundations for secure information storage and transfer in today's world of computers and the internet, Cryptography has been used for thousands of years, ever since humans had the need to protect the content of their communications from adversaries.

In this talk, Profesor Fred Piper, from the renowned Information Security Group at Royal Holloway (University of London) will discuss how cryptography, the way of keeping information a secret, has evolved over the past 2000 years! And how cryptography is continuing to evolve to meet the current and future needs of secure information management in today's globally networked and mobile world.

About the Speaker

Professor Fred Piper, BSc, PhD (London), ARCS, DIC, CEng, CMath, FIEE, FIMA, BCS, CISSP, CISM, Director of External Relations, Information Security Group.

Fred Piper was appointed Professor of Mathematics at the University of London in 1975 and has worked in information security since 1979. In 1985, he formed a company, Codes & Ciphers Ltd, which offers consultancy advice in all aspects of information security. He has acted as a consultant to over 80 companies including a number of financial institutions and major industrial companies in the UK, Europe, Asia, Australia, South Africa and the USA. The consultancy work has been varied and has included algorithm design and analysis, work on EFTPOS and ATM networks, data systems, security audits, risk analysis and the formulation of security policies. He has lectured worldwide on information security, both academically and commercially, has published more than 100 papers and is joint author of Cipher Systems (1982), one of the first books to be published on the subject of protection of communications, Secure Speech Communications (1985), Digital Signatures - Security & Controls (1999) and Cryptography: A Very Short Introduction (2002).

Fred has been a member of a number of DTI advisory groups. He has also served on a number of Foresight Crime Prevention Panels and task forces concerned with fraud control, security and privacy. He is currently a member of the Scientific Council of the Smith Institute, the Board of Trustees for Bletchley Park and the Board of the Institute of Information Security professionals. He is also a member of (ISC)2's European Advisory Board, the steering group of the DTI's Cyber Security KTN, ISSA's advisory panel and the BCS's Information Security Forum.

In 2002, he was awarded an IMA Gold Medal for “services to mathematics” and received an honorary CISSP for “leadership in Information Security”. In 2003, Fred received an honorary CISM for “globally recognised leadership” and “contribution to the Information Security Profession”.   

 
     
 
 
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