Hi<br><br>The US ACM (Association for Computing Machinery) held a big A.M. Turing 100th birthday event this weekend, the webcast on Security is now available and may be interesting to some UKcrypto readers.<br>The panel are making interesting comments on the simplicitly versus complexity of computing devices, the hundreds of certificate authorities trusted by default by most PCs, ...<br>
<br>Webcasts: <a href="http://turing100.acm.org/index.cfm?p=webcast">http://turing100.acm.org/index.cfm?p=webcast</a><br>(The Security panel is currently the last webcast in the menu I see.)<br><br><br>Panel details: Information, Data, Security in a Networked Future<br>
Chair: Vint Cerf<br> Panel: John Hopcroft, Bob Kahn, Ron Rivest, Adi Shamir<br> Abstract<br> The digital information revolution begins as giants such as Alan Turing, Claude Shannon and John von Neumann,<br>
among many others, recognize the power of digital representations and programmable computers. Although rooted<br> in the technology of his time, Vannevar Bush's portrait of the information revolution has emerged and flourished<br>
especially in the form of the World Wide Web resting atop the global Internet.<br><br> The panelists will explore some specifics of the digital information revolution, notably theory and practice in<br> securing, authenticating and maintaining the integrity of information (Cerf); and roots of modern cryptography<br>
and current topics in this area (rivest and Shamir). They will also gain insight into the long-term problem of<br> identifying, fi nding, and assuring the integrity of digital objects in the most general sense of that term (Kahn).<br>
Finally, they look at how our understanding of computer science is changing (Hopcroft) and how that evolution<br> will affect the digital world in which are we spending an increasing fraction of our daily lives.<br>
<br>