Malcolm J. Williamson
Template:Short description Template:Use British English Template:Use dmy dates Template:Infobox scientist Malcolm John Williamson (2 November 1950 – 15 September 2015) was a British mathematician and cryptographer. In 1974 he developed what is now known as Diffie–Hellman key exchange.<ref name=singh>Template:Cite book</ref> He was then working at GCHQ and was therefore unable to publicise his research as his work was classified. Martin Hellman, who independently developed the key exchange at the same time, received credit for the discovery until Williamson's research was declassified by the British government in 1997.<ref name=singh/>
Williamson studied at Manchester Grammar School, winning first prize in the 1968 British Mathematical Olympiad.<ref>A.Gardiner "The Mathematical Olympiad Handbook" Oxford University Press, 1997</ref> He also won a Silver prize<ref>Template:Citation</ref> at the 1967 International Mathematical Olympiad in Cetinje, Yugoslavia and a Gold prize<ref>Template:Citation</ref> at the 1968 International Mathematical Olympiad in Moscow.<ref>Template:IMO results</ref> He read mathematics at Trinity College, Cambridge, graduating in 1971. After a year at Liverpool University, he joined GCHQ, and worked there until 1982.
From 1985 to 1989 Williamson worked at Nicolet Instruments in Madison, Wisconsin where he was the primary author on two digital hearing aid patents.<ref>US Patent 5091952 - Feedback suppression in digital signal processing hearing aids</ref><ref>US Patent 5027410 - Adaptive, programmable signal processing and filtering for hearing aids</ref> After that, he moved to the IDA Center for Communications Research, La Jolla,<ref>Template:Citation</ref> where he worked for the rest of his career.
His contributions to the invention of public-key cryptography, together with Clifford Cocks and James Ellis, have been recognized by the IEEE Milestone Award #104<ref>Template:Citation</ref> in 2010 and by induction into the Cryptologic Hall of Honor in 2021.
See also
References
External links
- Williamson's January 1974 internal GCHQ note "Non-Secret Encryption Using a Finite Field" (A couple of typos in this pdf: Extended Euclidean Algorithm modulus should be (p-1) instead of p.
Enc and Dec are performed using exponentiation; It should have been Ak instead of Ak; similar A(KI) and AI instead of AKI and AI, respectively. )