About
I am a Principal Researcher in the Cryptography group at Microsoft Research, Redmond. My primary research interests include key transparency, end-to-end encrypted communication, key management, decentralized identity systems, secure computation and authenticated data structures. I have also worked a bit on privacy leakage in systems deploying ML models. Before joining MSR, I graduated from Brown University (opens in new tab) in 2018. During my Ph.D. I was awarded the Microsoft Research Dissertation Grant 2017-2018 (opens in new tab), and the Paris C. Kanellakis Fellowship (opens in new tab).
You can find some of my recent work here:
- Key Transparency [OPTIKS: An Optimized Key Transparency System (iacr.org) (opens in new tab), ELEKTRA: Efficient Lightweight multi-dEvice Key TRAnsparency (iacr.org) (opens in new tab), Parakeet: Practical Key Transparency for End-to-End Encrypted Messaging – NDSS Symposium (ndss-symposium.org), (opens in new tab)Rotatable Zero Knowledge Sets | Advances in Cryptology – ASIACRYPT 2022 (acm.org) (opens in new tab), SEEMless | Proceedings of the 2019 ACM SIGSAC Conference on Computer and Communications Security (opens in new tab)]
- Secure Shuffle (opens in new tab)
- Decentralized Identity [Key recovery (opens in new tab), Zero-Knowledge Credentials (opens in new tab)]
- Privacy Leakage [Combing for Credentials: Active Pattern Extraction from Smart Reply (computer.org) (opens in new tab), Property Inference from Poisoning] (opens in new tab)