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== In popular culture ==
== In popular culture ==


Zimmerman's name appears in the [[novel]] ''[[The Da Vinci Code]]'':
Zimmermann's name appears in the [[novel]] ''[[The Da Vinci Code]]'':


{{quote|Da Vinci had been a cryptography pioneer, Sophie knew, although he was seldom given credit. Sophie's university instructors, while presenting computer encryption methods for securing data, praised modern cryptologists like Zimmermann and [[Bruce Schneier|Schneier]] but failed to mention that it was [[Leonardo da Vinci|Leonardo]] who had invented one of the first rudimentary forms of [[public key encryption]] centuries ago.<ref name="brown">{{cite book |last= Brown |first= Dan |authorlink= Dan Brown |title= [[The Da Vinci Code]] |edition= US hardback edition |date= [[2003-03-18]] |publisher= [[Doubleday]] |isbn= 0-385-50420-9 |pages= p. 199 }}</ref>}}
{{quote|Da Vinci had been a cryptography pioneer, Sophie knew, although he was seldom given credit. Sophie's university instructors, while presenting computer encryption methods for securing data, praised modern cryptologists like Zimmermann and [[Bruce Schneier|Schneier]] but failed to mention that it was [[Leonardo da Vinci|Leonardo]] who had invented one of the first rudimentary forms of [[public key encryption]] centuries ago.<ref name="brown">{{cite book |last= Brown |first= Dan |authorlink= Dan Brown |title= [[The Da Vinci Code]] |edition= US hardback edition |date= [[2003-03-18]] |publisher= [[Doubleday]] |isbn= 0-385-50420-9 |pages= p. 199 }}</ref>}}

==Awards==
==Awards==
Zimmermann has received numerous technical and humanitarian awards for his pioneering work in [[cryptography]]:
Zimmermann has received numerous technical and humanitarian awards for his pioneering work in [[cryptography]]:

Revision as of 04:05, 19 December 2007

For other uses of "Zimmermann", see Zimmermann (disambiguation)
Phil Zimmermann is the creator of the popular PGP encryption software.

Philip R. "Phil" Zimmermann Jr. (born February 12, 1954) is the creator of Pretty Good Privacy (PGP), the most widely used email encryption software in the world[citation needed]. He is also known for his work in VoIP encryption protocols, notably ZRTP and Zfone.

He was born in Camden, New Jersey. His father was a concrete mixer truck driver. He received a B.S. degree in computer science from Florida Atlantic University in Boca Raton in 1978.

He was one of the first to make asymmetric, or public key, encryption software readily available to the general public. He released the source code to PGP, and shortly thereafter, it became available overseas via the Internet, though Zimmermann has said he had no part in its distribution outside the US. After a report from RSA Data Security, Inc., who were in a licensing dispute with regard to use of the RSA algorithm in PGP, the Customs Service started a criminal investigation of Zimmermann, for allegedly violating the Arms Export Control Act. The US Government has long regarded cryptographic software as a munition, and thus subject to arms trafficking export controls. At that time, the boundary between permitted ("low strength") cryptography and impermissible ("high strength") cryptography placed PGP well on the too-strong-to-export side (this boundary has since been relaxed). The investigation lasted three years, but was finally dropped without filing charges.

After the government dropped its case without indictment in early 1996, Zimmermann founded PGP Inc. and released an updated version of PGP and some additional related products. That company was acquired by Network Associates (NAI) in December 1997, and Zimmermann stayed on for three years as a Senior Fellow. NAI decided to drop the product line and in 2002, PGP was acquired from NAI by a new company called PGP Corporation. Zimmermann now serves as a special advisor and consultant to that firm. Zimmermann is also a fellow at the Stanford Law School's Center for Internet and Society. He was a principal designer of the cryptographic key agreement protocol (the "association model") for the Wireless USB standard.

In the very first version of PGP, an encryption algorithm was given the humorous name BassOmatic (after a skit on Saturday Night Live) and Pretty Good Privacy itself is named after a Lake Wobegon fictional grocery store named Ralph's Pretty Good Grocery.

Zimmermann's name appears in the novel The Da Vinci Code:

Da Vinci had been a cryptography pioneer, Sophie knew, although he was seldom given credit. Sophie's university instructors, while presenting computer encryption methods for securing data, praised modern cryptologists like Zimmermann and Schneier but failed to mention that it was Leonardo who had invented one of the first rudimentary forms of public key encryption centuries ago.[1]

Awards

Zimmermann has received numerous technical and humanitarian awards for his pioneering work in cryptography:

See also

References

  1. ^ Brown, Dan (2003-03-18). The Da Vinci Code (US hardback edition ed.). Doubleday. pp. p. 199. ISBN 0-385-50420-9. {{cite book}}: |edition= has extra text (help); |pages= has extra text (help); Check date values in: |date= (help)
  2. ^ 35 Heroes of Freedom Reason, December 2003 Retrieved April 10, 2007