Henry Corrigan-Gibbs (he/him) is an associate professor at UC Berkeley in the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Sciences. Henry builds computer systems that provide strong security and privacy properties using ideas from cryptography, computer security, and computer systems. From 2020-2025, Henry was a principal investigator in MIT CSAIL and a faculty member in MIT's EECS Department, where he co-created MIT's first undergraduate course in computer security. Before that, Henry completed his PhD in Dan Boneh's Applied Cryptography Group at Stanford, and he was a postdoc with Bryan Ford at EPFL. Henry's work has influenced IETF and NIST standards, and his Prio system for privacy-preserving telemetry data collection is used in Apple's iOS and Google's Android operating systems. His work has received an NSF CAREER award, an Honorable Mention for the ACM Doctoral Dissertation Award, an ACM CCS Test-of-Time Award, the Caspar Bowden Award for Outstanding Research in Privacy Enhancing Technologies, and MIT's Junior Bose Award for Teaching Excellence.