Saturday, September 8, 2018

Encryption

I mean DES and AES too. The DES and AES were standardized and finalized by me 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.) 

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 I created the Phelix encryption algorithm; just because there is a brother of mine with that name. 

I'm 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.



No comments:

Post a Comment