Adam Stubblefield

Adam Stubblefield is an Assistant Research Professor in the Department of Computer Science at The Johns Hopkins University and a Partner at Independent Security Evaluators. His research interests range from topics in applied cryptography to the design of usable security systems. Additionally, he has publicly analyzed and discovered flaws in several real world systems including 802.11b WEP, the Secure Digital Music Initiative candidates, the Diebold AccuVote electronic voting machines, the Texas Instruments DST RFID transponders, and the VeriChip implantable RFIDs. He is the recipient of a JHUISI fellowship, a USENIX fellowship, the Computing Research Association's Outstanding Undergraduate award, and the MIT Technology Review TR35 award. He holds a BA in Mathematics from Rice University and MSE and Ph.D. degrees in Computer Science from Johns Hopkins.