Christopher Peikert
Chris Peikert named Fellow of the IACR
Peikert was selected for this honor based on his outstanding contributions to cryptography research.QuantUM*Lot to provide additional parking capacity on University of Michigan North Campus
A quantum parking lot will be completed this summer in front of the new Leinweber Computer Science and Information Building.2024 EECS Outstanding Achievement Awards
The EECS Department has honored four faculty for their sustained excellence in instruction and curricular development, distinguished participation in service activities, or for their significant achievements in scholarly research.Chris Peikert receives Crypto 2023 Test-of-Time Award
The award recognizes the sustained impact of Prof. Peikert’s research on oblivious transfer protocols and lattice-based encryption.New NIST post-quantum standards make use of research by Prof. Chris Peikert
Two cryptographic algorithms building on work by Peikert will contribute to NIST’s ongoing post-quantum cryptographic standard, and will be finalized in roughly two years.CSE researchers present five papers at ISCA 2022
17 U-M researchers proposed a variety of techniques to speed up complex graph algorithms, encrypted cloud computing, memory-intensive matrix operations, and more.CSE authors present six papers at MICRO 2021
12 co-authors had work accepted at the conference, including one Best Paper nominee.CSE researchers report over $11M in research grants last quarter
The awards were distributed to 18 different primary investigators.
NIST finalists for post-quantum security standards include research results developed by Prof. Chris Peikert
A new secure code is needed to protect private information from the power of quantum computing.
Building a security standard for a post-quantum future
A large quantum computer could retroactively decrypt almost all internet communication ever recorded.
Chris Peikert Receives TCC Test of Time Award for work in lattice cryptography
Prof. Peikert and his co-author received the award at the Fifteenth Theory of Cryptography Conference for their paper on efficient collision-resistant hashing on cyclic lattices.
Chris Peikert named first-ever Patrick C. Fischer development professor
Peikert’s research is dedicated to developing new, stronger mathematical foundations for cryptography.
Eleven New Faculty Join CSE
We're building a bigger, better CSE.