Robert H. Morris, Sr. | |
---|---|
Born |
Boston, Massachusetts |
July 25, 1932
Died | June 26, 2011 Lebanon, New Hampshire |
(aged 78)
Fields | Mathematics, cryptography |
Institutions | National Security Agency, Bell Labs |
Alma mater | Harvard University |
Spouse | Anne Farlow Morris |
Children | Robert Tappan Morris, Meredith Morris, Benjamin Morris |
Robert H. Morris, Sr. (July 25, 1932 – June 26, 2011) was an American cryptographer and computer scientist.
Morris was born in Boston, Massachusetts. His parents were Walter W. Morris, a salesman, and Helen Kelly Morris. He received a bachelor's degree in mathematics from Harvard University in 1957 and a master's degree in applied mathematics from Harvard in 1958.
He married Anne Farlow, and they had three children together: Robert Tappan Morris, author of the 1988 Morris Worm, Meredith Morris, and Benjamin Morris.
From 1960 until 1986, Morris was a researcher at Bell Labs and worked on Multics and later Unix. Morris's contributions to early versions of Unix include the math library, the bc programming language, the program crypt
, and the password encryption scheme used for user authentication. The encryption scheme (invented by Roger Needham), was based on using a trapdoor function (now called a key derivation function) to compute hashes of user passwords which were stored in the file /etc/passwd
; analogous techniques, relying on different functions, are still in use today.
In 1986, Morris began work at the National Security Agency (NSA). He served as chief scientist of the NSA's National Computer Security Center, where he was involved in the production of the Rainbow Series of computer security standards, and retired from the NSA in 1994. He once told a reporter that, while at the NSA, he helped the FBI decode encrypted evidence.