By 1996 he had joined the Isaac Newton Institute, Cambridge University as Research Program Organizer, and since 1997, Landrock has been senior member of the Wolfson College, Cambridge University.[2][3] Landrock has been member of the Danish IT Security Council as adviser to the Danish Government[6] from 1999 to 2007.
From 1997 until 2010, Landrock was as a Member of Microsoft's Technical Advisory Board in Cambridge and has also served as a member of the board of the Villum Foundation in Copenhagen since 2008. In 2014 Landrock became Member of the Technical Advisory Board of the Turing Gateway of Mathematics at Cambridge University.[2] In 2021, he was elected a By-Fellow of Churchill College, Cambridge.[9]
Cryptography
Landrock was President of the International Association for Cryptologic Research from 1992 to 1995[2] and General Chair at the Eurocrypt conference for cryptography research in 1990.[10] In 1996 he was one of the organizers of a research programme in Cryptography at the Newton Institute at University of Cambridge.[2] The term "What You See Is What You Sign" (WYSIWYS) was coined in 1998 by Landrock and Torben P. Pedersen of Cryptomathic during their work on delivering secure and legally binding digital signatures for Pan-European projects.[11]
He has lectured on cryptography at more than 150 Universities. The European Patent Office recognized that Landrock's “inventions have helped secure electronic voting systems and electronic passport solutions”.[1]
Awards and recognition
In 1991 Landrock was awarded the Danish Data Security Prize, and in 2004, Landrock received the BIT Price for engineering entrepreneurship from the Danish Engineers.[16]
His achievements with Cryptomathic were recognised by the World Economic Forum in 2003 and he received the VISA Smart Start Award for the work on Chip and Pin.[3] In 2010, Landrock was named a finalist for European Inventor 2010 in the "Lifetime Achievement" category by the European Patent Office stating that many of today’s established data encryption methods and codes “bear the mark of ... Peter Landrock”[1]
In July 2019, Landrock was awarded the degree of Doctor of Science honoris causa for his lifetime achievement in cryptographic technology.[17]
↑Fumy, W.; Landrock, P. (1993). "Principles of key management". IEEE Journal on Selected Areas in Communications. 11 (5): 785–793. doi:10.1109/49.223881.
↑Landrock, P.; van Tilborg (Ed.), H.C.A. (2005). Payment Card, in: Encyclopedia of Cryptography and Security. Springer. ISBN978-0-387-23473-1.