D. J. Bernstein
Curriculum vitae
This is my career summary in a traditional format:
Newer items (through 2006.08.03) that haven't been integrated into the summary yet:
- 2005.01.09: Posted new paper,
easycbc.
- 2005.01.10:
poly1305
has been accepted to FSE 2005.
- 2005.01.13: Posted revision of poly1305.
- 2005.01.19: Posted 2004.11.13 revision of
powers2.
- 2005.01.28:
securitywcs
has been accepted to Eurocrypt 2005.
- 2005.02.06:
quartic
has been accepted to Mathematics of Computation.
- 2005.02.18: Major software release:
poly1305aes.
- 2005.02.28: Posted 2005.02.27 revision of securitywcs.
- 2005.03.23: Posted new paper,
permutations.
- 2005.03.29: Posted revision of poly1305.
- 2005.04.04: Corrected publisher errors in securitywcs.
- 2005.04.14: Posted huge revision of
cachetiming.
- 2005.04.25: Posted new paper,
bruteforce.
- 2005.04.27: Posted 47 pages of
Salsa20 documentation.
- 2005.05.04: Corrected publisher errors in poly1305.
- 2005.05.09: Posted revision of powers2.
- 2005.05.13: bruteforce has been accepted to SKEW 2005.
- 2005.05.13: Salsa20 has been accepted to SKEW 2005.
- 2005.06.02: powers2
has been accepted to Mathematics of Computation.
- 2005.06.19:
meecrt
has been accepted to Mathematics of Computation.
- 2005.09.15: Major software release:
curve25519.
- 2005.10.09: Posted revision of
smallheight.
- 2005.11.09: Posted revision of
meecrt.
- 2005.11.15: Posted new paper,
curve25519.
- 2005.12.23: Posted new paper,
stream256.
- 2005.12.24: Posted revision of
abccong.
- 2006.01.12:
stream256
has been accepted to SASC 2006.
- 2006.01.20:
curve25519
has been accepted to PKC 2006.
- 2006.01.23: Posted revision of
stream256.
- 2006.02.09: Posted revision of
curve25519.
- 2006.02.19: Posted new paper,
diffchain.
- 2006.03.02: Posted new paper,
zkcrypt.
- 2006.05.31: Posted revision of
smallheight.
- 2006.07.21: Posted new paper,
curvezero.
- 2006.07.26: Posted revision of
curvezero.
- 2006.08.01: Salsa20 has entered Phase 2 of the ECRYPT Stream Cipher Project
as a ``focus cipher.''
Also a clarification:
I should have said in Section 4 of activities-20050107
that the numbers 2/5, 2/3, 6/7
were for fixed degree 5+1.
The general-degree formulas are more complicated,
and of course require more precision than o(1).