I was a Ph.D. student and member of the Engineering Cryptographic Protocols (ENCRYPTO) group at the Center for Research in Security and Privacy (CRISP) between 2012 and 2016. In December 2016, I graduated with distinction on
Faster Oblivious Transfer Extension and its Impact on Secure Computation.
My research focuses on the design and implementation of privacy preserving cryptographic protocols.
Furthermore, my interests include multi-party computation, privacy preserving protocols, side-channel attacks and countermeasures against power analysis attacks, and the SHA-3 competition.
You can find further information on my personal webpage.
Privacy-Preserving Interdomain Routing at Internet Scale
Gilad Asharov, Daniel Demmler, Michael Schapira, Thomas Schneider, Gil Segev, Scott Shenker, Michael ZohnerPushing the communication barrier in secure computation using lookup tables
Ghada Dessouky, Farinaz Koushanfar, Ahmad-Reza Sadeghi, Thomas Schneider, Shaza Zeitouni, Michael ZohnerScalable private set intersection based on ot extension
Benny Pinkas, Thomas Schneider, Michael ZohnerMore Efficient Oblivious Transfer Extensions
Gilad Asharov, Yehuda Lindell, Thomas Schneider, Michael ZohnerPhasing: Private set intersection using permutation-based hashing
Benny Pinkas, Thomas Schneider, Gil Segev, Michael ZohnerMore efficient oblivious transfer extensions with security for malicious adversaries
Gilad Asharov, Yehuda Lindell, Thomas Schneider, Michael ZohnerABY - A Framework for Efficient Mixed-Protocol Secure Two-Party Computation
Daniel Demmler, Thomas Schneider, Michael ZohnerFaster private set intersection based on OT extension
Benny Pinkas, Thomas Schneider, Michael ZohnerAd-hoc secure two-party computation on mobile devices using hardware tokens
Daniel Demmler, Thomas Schneider, Michael Zohner