Emin Gün Sirer
Emin Gün Sirer | |
---|---|
Nationality | Turkish |
Citizenship | United States |
Alma mater | Princeton University University of Washington |
Known for | SPIN |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Computer Science |
Institutions | Cornell University |
Thesis | Secure, Efficient and Manageable Virtual Machine Systems. (2002) |
Doctoral advisor | Brian N. Bershad |
Website | www |
Emin Gün Sirer is a Turkish-American computer scientist. He is currently an associate professor of computer science at Cornell University, co-director of IC3.[1] He is known for his contributions to peer-to-peer systems, operating systems and computer networking. Sirer is also founder of Avalanche protocol, a project related to building computing platform using Avalanche Consensus.
Education[]
Sirer attended high-school at Robert College, received his undergraduate degree at Princeton University,[2] and finished his graduate studies at the University of Washington. He received his Ph.D. in Computer Science and Engineering in 2002 under the supervision of Brian N. Bershad.[3]
Career[]
Before becoming a professor at Cornell University Sirer worked at AT&T Bell Labs on Plan 9, at DEC SRC, and at NEC.
Sirer is best known for his contributions to operating systems, distributed systems, and fundamental cryptocurrency research. He co-developed the SPIN (operating system),[4] where the implementation and interface of an operating system could be modified safely at run-time by type-safe extension code.[5] He also led the Nexus OS effort, where he developed new techniques for attesting to, and reasoning about, the semantic properties of remote programs.[6] His Karma system, published in 2003, is the first cryptocurrency that uses a distributed mint based on proof-of-work.[7]
In conjunction with his research group, he published the paper "Majority is not Enough, Bitcoin Mining is Vulnerable" which described the selfish mining attack, an attack on Bitcoin with only 1/3 of total hash power. He also developed Bitcoin-NG, a bitcoin scaling solution, and Bitcoin Covenants, a security solution. He is also co-founder of bloXroute, a company focusing on solving the forgotten "layer 0" networking layer.[8]
Avalanche protocol[]
Sirer is founder of a project related to computing platform using Avalanche Consensus and its native token AVAX.[9] The Avalanche project was first incubated at Cornell University, where the research was led by Emin Gün Sirer assisted by Maofan Yin and Kevin Sekniqi.[10][11] The research resulted in establishing Ava Labs technology company with the purpose of developing an alternative blockchain technology for the financial sector.[12][13]
Awards[]
- Brilliant-10 by Popular Science[14]
- National Science Foundation CAREER Award[15]
See also[]
References[]
- ^ Allison, Ian (31 May 2017). "Cornell's blockchain experts tackle off-chain transactions with Intel SGX". International Business Times. Retrieved 30 September 2017.
- ^ Subbaraman, Nidhi. "Meet The Immigrant Scientists Spooked By A Looming Trump Presidency". BuzzFeed. Retrieved 30 September 2017.
- ^ "UW Systems Lab: People". University of Washington. Retrieved 30 September 2017.
- ^ Bershad, Brian N.; Chambers, Craig; Eggers, Susan; Maeda, Chris; McNamee, Dylan; Pardyak, Przemyslaw; Savage, Stefan; Sirer, Emin Gün; Sirer, Emin Gun (1994). "SPIN - An Extensible Microkernel for Application-specific Operating System Services". CiteSeerX 10.1.1.47.8338. Cite journal requires
|journal=
(help) - ^ "Extensibility, Safety and Performance in the SPIN Operating System" (PDF). University of California San Diego. Retrieved 30 September 2017.
- ^ Shieh, Alan; Williams, Dan; Gün, Emin; Fred, Sirer; Schneider, B. (2005). "Nexus: A new operating system for trustworthy computing". ACM Press: 1–9. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.72.340. Cite journal requires
|journal=
(help) - ^ "Karma Virtual Currency for P2P".
- ^ "Blocked: The Technicalities of Blockchain". Harvard Political Review.
- ^ "A Cornell University Crypto Professor Is Launching His Own Coin". Bloomberg. 16 May 2019.
- ^ "Blockchain startup raises a quick $42M in first sale". Cornell Chronicle.
- ^ "AVA Labs' Avalanche Protocol targeting improved financial services". Bankless Times.
- ^ "A Cornell University Crypto Professor Is Launching His Own Coin". Bloomberg.
- ^ Leising, Mathew (April 17, 2020). "New Startup Aims to Prove Blockchain Is Fast Enough for Finance". Bloomberg. Retrieved 27 August 2020.
- ^ "PopSci's 6th Annual Brilliant Ten". Popular Science. Retrieved 30 September 2017.
- ^ Steele, Bill. "Cornell Profs Join NSF Campaign for Cybersecurity". Cornell University. Retrieved 30 September 2017.
External links[]
- Emin Gün Sirer publications indexed by Google Scholar
- Official Blog
- Living people
- People associated with cryptocurrency
- American people of Turkish descent
- Turkish American
- American computer scientists
- Turkish computer scientists
- Robert College alumni
- Princeton University alumni
- University of Washington alumni
- Cornell University faculty