Garbled circuit is a cryptographic protocol that enables two-party secure computation without the need for a trusted third party. It was first introduced by Andrew Yao in 1986 and later documented by Oded Goldreich in 2003. The term "garbled circuit" was coined by Beaver, Micali, and Rogaway in 1990.
UC Berkeley
Fall 2022
A graduate-level course surveying modern topics in computer systems security, including secure messaging, blockchain, hardware security, and secure federated computation. It requires completion of CS 162 and CS 161 or equivalent for enrollment.
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