 So welcome to the rump session this year So it's called the fellowship of the rump because as you know because Christian mentioned it the fellowship program is 15 years old so we will have a little Celebration of the contribution to the fellows or rather the fellows themselves So what you will see is that for each slide when we begin there will be Not this there will be a fellow here and Then you have to figure out who is this fellow and then if you guess all the fellows correctly You will be able to retrieve a plain text if you're very clever And then the first person who shouts this plain text, which is allowed. You're allowed to shout it during any of the talks So no no not the play that's yeah, that's a sarian, but and then whoever gets first will win cards against crypto set So also if you notice that there is this line here So make sure if you are on the rump session program if your speaker that you if you have to get ready then you walk over there Then when you're here you can start talking and go to your slide Well, then once you have fixed your to finish your talk then please Press again so you go to The next one so this then brings me to the next talk the first actual talk of the room session Which is the Borg early career award will which will be presented by mutu, but he is not the recipient of the award So please go ahead. I've been asked by the the CRAW committee to Give this award just want to tell you a little bit about it the CRAW is an action board under the computing research Association That helps women and other underrepresented groups persist and succeed in computing research. It was found in 1991 Funded by NSF industry and other private donors every year the CRAW selects an outstanding nominee for Outstanding recipient for the Borg early career award this honors the late Anita Borg who was one of the first members of CRAW As well as an inspiration For her commitment to increasing participation of women in computing research. So this award is given to women in the field young Young women in the field who have made significant research contributions Both to the profession as well as towards the outreach to to women it the award recognizes work in areas of academia and Industrial government research labs that has had a positive and significant impact of advancing women in the computing research community and As I mentioned targeted at women with relatively early in the in the in their careers This year the award it goes to Nadia Heninger for her For her research contributions in the area of cryptography security Cryptanalysis of public key cryptography and practice as well as her outreach Outreach efforts to For women in the grebsack workshop for women underrepresented minorities in security Crossfire workshop the Grace Hopper conference the our CS the RCS workshop for undergraduate women in CS Workshops for Girl Scouts high school women and undergraduate women in CS while she was in UP and before Going to UCSB and it gives me great pleasure to give this award to not Nadia will say a few words already over time, but Muthu said I should say something. It's a pretty vase So I wanted to say just very very briefly that the first time I ever attended crypto was 10 years ago exactly 2009 and that was my first and only crypto paper And it was my first conference talk ever and I was incredibly nervous the night before it was the first talk in the first session of Field that I wasn't even a member of I was I'm a failed theorist and I showed up and the night before there were 10 people who were helping me practice my talk in one of the dorm rooms and I Felt so encouraged everybody was so friendly and I remember sitting on stage and Having a slide that's like let me explain RSA and R&S are sitting in the front row I also as a sort of failed theorist who was adopted by this community and I really wanted to express how grateful I was to the People who sort of took a chance on me Shacom and Dan Bernstein and Tonya longa and Henry particular sort of adopted me as a as a lost grad student Now now for some reason I'm here. I Really am grateful to this field and how friendly it is There's so many wonderful women and there's so many wonderful friendly people and people sort of end up here Washed up and do great things