Generated by GPT-5-mini| Yehuda Lindell | |
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| Name | Yehuda Lindell |
| Nationality | Israeli |
| Occupation | Cryptographer, Professor |
| Alma mater | Bar-Ilan University, University of London |
| Known for | Secure multi-party computation, Cryptography education |
Yehuda Lindell is an Israeli cryptographer and academic known for contributions to secure multi-party computation, protocol design, and cryptographic engineering. He is a professor associated with several research institutions and is noted for authoring widely used textbooks and tools in applied cryptography. His work intersects with practical implementations, standards bodies, and academic collaborations across computer science and mathematics.
Lindell completed his undergraduate studies at Bar-Ilan University and pursued doctoral studies at the University of London, earning a Ph.D. under supervision connected to researchers associated with Jerusalem, London, Israel Defense Forces research contexts. During his formative years he engaged with research groups linked to Weizmann Institute of Science, Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Technion – Israel Institute of Technology, and academic networks including collaborators from Tel Aviv University and Ben-Gurion University of the Negev. His education connected him with scholars who later worked with institutions such as Stanford University, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, University of California, Berkeley, and Carnegie Mellon University.
Lindell has held positions at universities and research centers including appointments tied to Bar-Ilan University and visiting roles collaborating with labs at Microsoft Research, Google Research, IBM Research, and national laboratories that engage with cryptographic standards such as National Institute of Standards and Technology. He has supervised doctoral students who went on to positions at ETH Zurich, University of Cambridge, University of Oxford, Princeton University, and Cornell University. Lindell has served on program committees for conferences including CRYPTO, EUROCRYPT, ASIACRYPT, IEEE Symposium on Security and Privacy, and ACM Conference on Computer and Communications Security. He has interacted with professional organizations like the International Association for Cryptologic Research, Computing Research Association, and editorial boards for journals such as Journal of Cryptology and ACM Transactions on Privacy and Security.
Lindell's research focuses on secure computation, zero-knowledge protocols, and authenticated encryption, with influential results in secure two-party computation, protocol composition, and efficiency improvements for practical deployment. His papers have been presented at venues including CRYPTO, EUROCRYPT, ASIACRYPT, PKC, and Crypto Engineering Workshop, and have been cited in follow-on work from groups at Bell Labs, Facebook AI Research, Amazon Web Services, and governmental labs like Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency. He developed techniques building on foundations by researchers associated with Odlyzko, Diffie–Hellman, Rivest, Shamir, Adleman, and later practical frameworks used by projects at OpenSSL, NaCl, libsodium, and standards efforts at Internet Engineering Task Force and ISO/IEC JTC 1/SC 27. Collaborations extended to scholars affiliated with Cornell Tech, University College London, École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne, Duke University, and University of Pennsylvania. His contributions influenced implementations evaluated in empirical studies by teams at Google, Microsoft, Intel, AMD, and cloud providers such as Google Cloud Platform and Microsoft Azure.
Lindell authored a textbook widely used in courses on applied cryptography, referenced alongside works by Bruce Schneier, Ross Anderson, Jonathan Katz, Dawn Song, and Ron Rivest. His book is used in curricula at institutions including Harvard University, Yale University, Columbia University, Princeton University, and University of Chicago. He developed lecture notes, problem sets, and software labs integrating tools such as OpenSSL, GnuPG, and implementations intended for classrooms at Technion – Israel Institute of Technology and Tel Aviv University. His pedagogical materials have been incorporated into workshops at RSA Conference, Black Hat, DEF CON, and summer schools like International Summer School on Cryptography and European Summer School in Information Theory.
Lindell's research has been recognized with best paper nominations and awards at conferences including CRYPTO, EUROCRYPT, and ASIACRYPT, and he has been invited to give keynote and plenary talks at venues such as Real World Crypto Symposium and RSA Conference. He has received grants and fellowships from funding bodies including the European Research Council, Israeli Science Foundation, and collaborative projects supported by the European Union. His work has been cited in standards discussions at IETF and ISO, and acknowledged by industrial partners including IBM, Microsoft, and Google for contributions to applied cryptographic systems.
Lindell is based in Israel and maintains affiliations with academic departments and research groups at Bar-Ilan University and international collaborators at University of London and other institutions. He is an active member of professional bodies such as the International Association for Cryptologic Research and participates in advisory roles for startups and consortia in cryptography and privacy technologies, interacting with entities like Cryptography Research (Intel) and industry initiatives from Cloud Security Alliance and Open Privacy Foundation. He has collaborated on projects involving public sector partners and academic consortia across Europe, North America, and Asia.
Category:Living people Category:Israeli computer scientists Category:Cryptographers