Doug Tygar 

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Short Biography

Doug Tygar is Professor of Computer Science at UC Berkeley and also a Professor  of Information Management at UC Berkeley.  He works in the areas of computer security, privacy, and electronic commerce.  His current research includes privacy, security issues in sensor webs, digital rights management, and usable computer security.  His awards include a National Science Foundation Presidential Young Investigator Award, an Okawa Foundation Fellowship, a teaching award from Carnegie Mellon, and invited keynote addresses at PODC, PODS, VLDB, and many other conferences. 

Doug Tygar has written three books; his book Secure Broadcast Communication in Wired and Wireless Networks (with Adrian Perrig) is a standard reference and has been translated to Japanese.  He designed cryptographic postage standards for the US Postal Service and has helped build a number of security and electronic commerce systems including:  Strongbox, Dyad, Netbill, and Micro-Tesla.  He served as chair of the Defense Department's ISAT Study Group on Security with Privacy, and was a founding board member of ACM's Special Interest Group on Electronic Commerce.  He helped create and remains an active member of TRUST (Team for Research in Ubiquitous Security Technologies).   TRUST is a new National Science Foundation Science and Technology Center with headquarters at UC Berkeley and involving faculty from Berkeley, Carnegie Mellon, Cornell, Stanford, and Vanderbilt.

Before coming to UC Berkeley, Dr. Tygar was tenured faculty at Carnegie Mellon's Computer Science Department, where he continues to hold an Adjunct Professor position.  He received his doctorate from Harvard and his undergraduate degree from Berkeley.

 


© Doug Tygar (web updated 30 June 2013)