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Stuhlsatzenhaus 5
66123 Saarbrücken (Germany)

Short Bio

Prof. Dr. Cas Cremers is Faculty at CISPA since 2018.

He obtained his PhD in 2006 from Eindhoven University of Technology in the Netherlands. From 2006 to 2013 he was a postdoctoral researcher, and senior researcher and lecturer, at ETH Zurich in Switzerland. In 2013 he moved to the University of Oxford as an Associate Professor. In 2015 he became (full) Professor of Information security at the University of Oxford. He joined CISPA in 2018.

CV: Last four stations

Since 2018
Faculty at CISPA Helmholtz Center for Information Security
Since 2018
Professor Of Computer Science at Saarland University
2013 - 2018
Professor of Information Security, Associate Professor (2013-2015) at University of Oxford
2006 – 2013
Postdoctoral Researcher, Lecturer, Information Security Group at ETH Zurich

Publications by Cas Cremers

Year 2020

Conference / Medium

CCS
Proceedings of the 2020 ACM SIGSAC Conference on Computer and Communications Security (CCS ’20)CCS 2020

Article

IEEE Data Engineering Bulletin Volume 43, Number 2, June 2020

Year 2019

Conference / Medium

CCS
Proceedings of the 26th ACM Conference on Computer and Communications Security26th ACM Conference on Computer and Communications Security

Conference / Medium

EuroS&P
Proceedings of the 4th IEEE European Symposium on Security and Privacy4th IEEE European Symposium on Security and Privacy

Conference / Medium

NDSS
Network and Distributed Systems Security (NDSS) Symposium 2019

Year 2018

Article

IEEE Transactions on Information Forensics and Security

Teaching by Cas Cremers

Summer 2020

Proseminar: Seminal Papers in Cryptography

In this proseminar we study a selection of seminal research works in cryptography—starting with the invention of public-key cryptography in the 1970s and making our way towards the present.

Winter 2019/20

Seminar: Secure Messaging

The focus on this course is on modern ways to mathematically specify what various levels of messaging security actually mean, and the methodologies that can be used to prove that this is indeed the case.