CAMS/SCMA Short Course on
CRYPTOGRAPHY and DATA
SECURITY
May 29, 1997
Presenters:
Professor Ronald C. Mullin of ICR Data Encryption
Group, and co-founder of Certicom Ltd.,
and
Bruno Di Stefano, P. Eng., President of Nuptek Systems Ltd.,
Chairman of IEEE. Toronto Section.
Goals of the Course:
With the arrival of the Information Age, cryptography has grown from
an exotic instrument of the military and diplomatic corps to an essential
tool for a wide segment of industry and commerce. It can be used to
protect all forms of electronic communications such as Fax, e-mail,
cellular phones, and home banking systems.
Cryptography can replace the sealed envelope of a paper-oriented system
and ensure privacy on electronic media. More important is its ability
to prevent forgery of electronic documents, and to supply mutual authentication
of senders and recipients of these documents. Without such tools wide-scale
electronic commerce, using vehicles such as the Internet, would be impossible.
This Short Course is intended for students and working professionals
alike; in fact for anyone interested in learning about the fascinating
and rapidly expanding field of security in data communications and its
underlying mathematics. The only prerequisite for this course is a knowledge
of basic undergraduate-level mathematics.
This Short Course is offered immediately preceding the CAMS/SCMA 18th
Annual Meeting, May 30 to June 1, 1997 in Toronto, Ontario.
Co-Hosts:
University of Guelph, The University of Western Ontario and The
Fields Institute for Research in Mathematical Sciences.
Co-Organizers:
A.T. Lawniczak (Guelph), W.F. Langford (Fields, Guelph), P.J.
Sullivan (Western Ontario).