Shafi Goldwasser

Shafi Goldwasser
שפרירה גולדווסר
Goldwasser in 2010
Born
Shafrira Goldwasser

1959 (age 66–67)
New York City, United States
Citizenship
  • Israel
  • United States
EducationCarnegie Mellon University (BS)
University of California, Berkeley (MS, PhD)
Known for
  • Zero-knowledge proof
  • Probabilistic encryption
  • Blum–Goldwasser cryptosystem
  • Goldwasser–Micali cryptosystem
Children2
Awards
  • Grace Murray Hopper Award (1996)
  • Gödel Prize (1993, 2001)
  • Member of the National Academy of Sciences (2004)
  • IEEE Emanuel R. Piore Award (2011)
  • BBVA Award (2018)
  • RSA Mathematics Award (1998)
  • Loreal Unesco Women in Science Award (2021)
  • Turing Award (2012)
  • Suffrage Science award (2016)
  • ACM Fellow (2017)
  • AAAS Fellow (2000)
Scientific career
FieldsComputer science, cryptography
Institutions
  • Massachusetts Institute of Technology
  • Weizmann Institute
  • Simons Institute, Berkeley
ThesisProbabilistic Encryption: Theory and Applications (1984)
Doctoral advisor
Manuel Blum
Doctoral students
  • Elette Boyle
  • Johan Håstad
  • Yael Tauman Kalai
  • Tal Malkin
  • Amit Sahai
  • Salil Vadhan
  • Vinod Vaikuntanathan
Websitepeople.csail.mit.edu/shafi

Shafrira Goldwasser (Hebrew: שפרירה גולדווסר; born 1959) is an Israeli-American computer scientist. She is the RSA Professor of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, a professor of mathematical sciences at the Weizmann Institute of Science, the former director of the Simons Institute for the Theory of Computing, and co-founder and chief scientist of Duality Technologies. In 2012, she and Silvio Micali won the ACM Turing Award.