Sorry for the short notice, but we're going to multicast on Tuesday a talk
Whit Diffie did here last year on the history of PKC.

Unfortunately, multicast support is flaky at best on the UK Internet: most
universities will have it, but ISPs may not. I'm not sure about the global
situation.

You need three programs to watch: sdr (session directory), vic (video) and
rat (audio), which are all at
http://www-mice.cs.ucl.ac.uk/multimedia/software/

When you run sdr, you will see on Tuesday a description of the session
details, and can start vic and rat from there to view the lecture.

Ian :)
--
Date:    Tuesday, May 16

Time     15:00 BST (14:00 GMT)

Title:   Non-secret encryption and public-key cryptography

Speaker: Dr. Whitfield Diffie

In a remarkable case of 'scientific parallelism', a secret British group
and
a public American group, working entirely independently, made very similar
discoveries during the early 1970s. The discovery was a revolutionary new
form of cryptography. What was 'Non-secret Encryption' to the British and
'Public Key Cryptography' to the Americans, is at the heart of internet
commerce and is achieving wide use throughout telecommunication.

Whit Diffie, whose interests are both historical and scientific, was a
participant in the American endeavour and has studied the work of the
British team since the early 1980s. At a UCL public lecture on 29 April
1999, he ranged from reflections on the personal experience of discovery to
an examination of the techniques developed and analysis of the differences
in thinking of the two groups.

The talk was organised by the British Society for the History of
Mathematics and the Department of Computer Science, UCL.

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