Dan Geer is a security researcher with a quantitative bent. His group at MIT produced Kerberos, and a number of startups later he is still at it — today as a Senior Fellow at In-Q-Tel. He writes a lot at every length, and sometimes it gets read such as the semi-famous paper on whether a computing monoculture rises to the level of a national security risk. He’s an electrical engineer, a statistician, and someone who thinks truth is best achieved by adversarial procedures. You can access his publications here.
Dan Geer is a security researcher with a quantitative bent. His group at MIT produced Kerberos, and a number of startups later he is still at it — today as a Senior Fellow at In-Q-Tel. He writes a lot at every length, and sometimes it gets read such as the semi-famous paper on whether a computing monoculture rises to the level of a national security risk. He’s an electrical engineer, a statistician, and someone who thinks truth is best achieved by adversarial procedures. You can access his publications here.