Mihir Bellare
Mihir Bellare | |
|---|---|
| Occupation | Professor |
| Board member of | San Diego Privacy Advisory Board |
| Awards | |
| Academic background | |
| Alma mater | Caltech (BS) Massachusetts Institute of Technology (PhD) |
| Thesis | Randomness in Interactive Proofs (1991) |
| Doctoral advisor | Silvio Micali |
| Academic work | |
| Discipline | Computer science |
| Sub-discipline | Cryptography |
| Institutions | University of California San Diego |
| Notable ideas | Random oracle model |
Mihir Bellare is a cryptographer and professor at the University of California San Diego. He holds a Bachelor of Science degree from the California Institute of Technology and a Ph.D. from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He has published several seminal papers in the field of cryptography (notably in the area of provable security), many of which were co-written with Phillip Rogaway. Bellare has published a number of papers in the field of Format-Preserving Encryption. His students include Michel Abdalla, Chanathip Namprempre, Tadayoshi Kohno and Anton Mityagin. Bellare is one of the authors of skein.
In 2003 Bellare was a recipient of RSA Conference's Sixth Annual Award for outstanding contributions in the field of mathematics for his research in cryptography. In 2013 he became a Fellow of the Association for Computing Machinery. In 2019 he was awarded Levchin Prize for Real-World Cryptography for his outstanding contributions to the design and analysis of real-world cryptosystems, including the development of random oracle model, modes of operation, HMAC, and models for key exchange.
Bellare's papers cover topics including:
- HMAC
- Random oracle
- OAEP
- Probabilistic signature scheme
- Provable security
- Format-preserving encryption
On September 14, 2022, Bellare was appointed by the mayor of San Diego to the city's Privacy Advisory Board.