Saturday, September 8, 2018

Encryption

The DES and AES were standardized and finalized by me/us too. I think it was also easy to break AES for military purposes; there are loopholes in AES. We started the Internet too; an uncle of mine was Tim Berners Lee group. I remember an India man was there suspecting we were designing nukes, but it was the Internet being invented. I think the place was bombed after that. Well, maybe just for a TV series...

I should co-own RSA the security company, and PayPal for my auntie of mine. I was "Rivest" in looks and knowledge that time. I'm not sure we created the Phelix encryption algorithm just because there is a brother of mine with that name. 

I was thinking of coming back in Mathematics for the area of security and encryption. I feel I should be responsible and reveal to the world my mathematical discoveries. I mean, I had an MD6, maybe in 2000-2008, when I had a very good understanding again of encryption and cryptography. And results in SHA (Secure Hash Algorithm) related to data compression (but the thing is, I already forgot about them). I believe, however, that my early data compression programs (particularly LZ-based) take into account this discovery. 

G.R. Tamayo, May 2018


In high school, some groups wanted me to break crypto (with their usual threats), but I can't recall encryption that time. I was called, to my surprise, to break crypto in a certain college school. But couldn't do it, couldn't recall. I would only give "clues" or "keywords" to them (the ones that I could remember) but now I think it was wrong to give even clues and keywords because they could be a goldmine of information already to them. The topic was encryption but perhaps my attention was being diverted again from my Hollywood music and movie ownerships that were already worth big million$ that time. 

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