Jonathan Herzog


Important note

This page has been moved. I am now at the Naval Postgraduate School. A more recently-updated page can be found there.

Papers

Chances are, you've come here to get an electronic copy of one of my papers. I'm glad somebody's reading them. Here they are:
[1] Jonathan Herzog, Christopher McLaren, and Anant Godbole. Generalized k-matches. Statistics and Probability Letters, 38:167-175, 1998.
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[2] F. Javier Thayer Fábrega, Jonathan Herzog, and Joshua D. Guttman. Strand spaces: Why is a security protocol correct? In 1998 IEEE Symposium on Security and Privacy. IEEE Computer Society Press, May 1998.
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[3] F. Javier Thayer Fábrega, Jonathan Herzog, and Joshua D. Guttman. Honest ideals on strand spaces. In Proceedings of the 11th IEEE Computer Security Foundations Workshop. IEEE Computer Society Press, June 1998.
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[4] F. Javier Thayer, Jonathan Herzog, and Joshua D. Guttman. Strand spaces: Proving security protocols correct. Journal of Computer Security, 7(2/3):191-230, 1999.
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[5] F. Javier Thayer Fábrega, Jonathan Herzog, and Joshua D. Guttman. Mixed strand spaces. In Proceedings of the 12th IEEE Computer Security Foundations Workshop. IEEE Computer Society Press, June 1999.
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[6] Jonathan Herzog. Computational soundness for formal adversaries. Master's thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, October 2002.
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[7] Jonathan Herzog. The Diffie-Hellman key-agreement scheme in the strand-space model. In 16th Computer Security Foundations Workshop, pages 234-247, Asilomar, CA, June 2003. IEEE CS Press.
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[8] Jonathan Herzog, Moses Liskov, and Silvio Micali. Plaintext awareness via key registration. In Dan Boneh, editor, Advances in Cryptology - CRYPTO 2003, volume 2729 of Lecture Notes in Computer Science, pages 548-564. Springer-Verlag, August 2003.
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[9] Jonathan Herzog. Computational Soundness for Standard Assumptions of Formal Cryptography. PhD thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, May 2004.
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[10] Joshua D. Guttman, F. Javier Thayer, Jay A. Carlson, Jonathan Herzog, John D. Ramsdell, and Brian T. Sniffen. Trust management in strand spaces: A rely-guarantee method. In David Schmidt, editor, Programming Languages and Systems: 13th European Symposium on Programming, number 2986 in LNCS, pages 325-339. Springer, 2004.
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[11] Ran Canetti and Jonathan Herzog. Universally composable symbolic analysis of cryptographic protocols (the case of encryption-based mutual authentication and key exchange). Cryptology ePrint Archive, Report 2004/334, 2004.
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[12] Jonathan Herzog. A computational interpretation of dolev-yao adversaries. Theoretical Computer Science, June 2005.
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Please note that if you came here looking for a paper by "Herzog and Guttman" (or vice versa) and it is not listed above, the chances are good that the Herzog in question is my wife, Amy Herzog. We both work and publish with Joshua Guttman, causing some small confusion.

Talks

Some talks I have given while at MIT:

Strand Spaces

The Strand Space method is a technique for analyzing security protocols (authentication and key distribution protocols, in particular) at a very high level of abstraction. I maintain a page tracking the
development of the Strand Space method.

Teaching

I was the Teaching Assistant for 6.045 (Automata, Computability and Complexity) which was taught (Spring 2002) by Prof. Ron Rivest. All information about that class can be found on the Spring 2002 6.045 web page.


Conference Affiliations


Contact Information


Brief Resume

  • 1993 through 1997: Harvey Mudd College. BS in Mathematics, High Honors, Departmental Honors
  • 1997 through present (part-time 2000 through 2004): Researcher, The MITRE Corporation.
  • 2000 through 2004: MIT, Ph. D. in cryptography from the Department Electrical Engineering and Computer Science. Committee consisted of Ron Rivest (advisor), Silvio Micali (also a collaborator) and Nancy Lynch (reader).

  • Who I am not

    While mine is a rare name, it is not so rare as to be unique. There is, in fact, more than one person named "Jonathan Herzog." In particular: I did, however, grow up in Maine (USA) and attend the Waynflete and Morse high schools. If that sounds familiar, you've probably found the right Jonathan Herzog.
    Jonathan Herzog
    Last modified: Wed Oct 10 15:09:23 EDT 2007