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Cryptography: A Very Short Introduction

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Cryptography is a part of everyday life for almost all of us, though we may not realise we're using it.

We are a far cry from the historical prediction that cryptography would only be used by militaries and governments. With vast quantities of sensitive information transferred online by individuals, companies, organizations, and nation states, cryptography is increasingly important to everyone, and most of us, often without realising, use it daily. Cryptography: A Very Short Introduction demystifies the art of cryptography by tracing its historical use, explaining how it works, and providing examples of its practical use. These include online shopping, chip and PIN bank cards, and communicating via mobile phone. While many of these uses have been mainstream for some time now, the development and deployment of cryptography has changed enormously in the last twenty years.

In this second edition, Sean Murphy and Rachel Player highlight the important advances in both academic cryptography research and its everyday use. Using non-technical language and without assuming advanced mathematical knowledge, they introduce symmetric and public-key cryptography and provide a detailed discussion of the design of cryptographic algorithms that are secure against quantum computers and the development of cryptographic algorithms with advanced functionalities. They also consider the new applications of cryptography such as blockchain, secure messaging apps, and electronic voting.

Authors: Murphy Sean, Player Rachel
Publisher: OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS
Pages: 160
ISBN: 9780192882233
Cover: Paperback
Edition Number: 2
Release Year: 2025

1:The role of cryptography
2:Understanding cryptography
3:Historical cryptosystems
4:Perfect secrecy
5:Symmetric cryptography
6:Public-key cryptography
7:Post-quantum cryptography
8:Advanced cryptography
9:Cryptography in everyday life
Mathematical background
References
Further reading
Index

Fred Piper, Director of the Information Security Group and Professor of Mathematics, Royal Holloway University of London, and Sean Murphy, Reader in Mathematics, Royal Holloway University of London

Rachel Player is a Senior lecturer in the Information Security Group at Royal Holloway, University of London. Her research considers post-quantum cryptography, and she is best known for her work in lattice-based cryptanalysis and homomorphic encryption. In 2019 she received The Radiant Award for Advancing Internet Security from the Internet Security Research Group.

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