Beefing up public-key encryption
MIT researchers show how to secure widely used encryption schemes against attackers who have intercepted examples of successful decryption.
MIT researchers show how to secure widely used encryption schemes against attackers who have intercepted examples of successful decryption.
Interactive proofs — mathematical games that underlie much modern cryptography — work even if players try to use quantum information to cheat.
Awards recognize a diverse range of technologies
Savvy hackers can steal a computer’s secrets by timing its data storage transactions or measuring its power use. New research shows how to stop them.
A new twist on pioneering work done by MIT cryptographers almost 30 years ago could lead to better ways of structuring contracts.
A switch that lets one photon alter the quantum state of another could point the way to both practical quantum computers and a quantum Internet.
How a handful of countercultural scientists changed the course of physics in the 1970s and helped open up the frontier of quantum information.
A new system would jam wireless signals sent to medical implants by unauthorized users.
Public-key system has worked and made Internet commerce feasible, but new systems are ready in case flaws are found.
A new system for ensuring accurate election tallies, which MIT researchers helped to develop, passed its first real-world test last Tuesday.
Even well-defended computers can leak shocking amounts of private data. MIT researchers seek out exotic attacks in order to shut them down