The Philadelphia Inquirer: Cryptography pioneer Silvio Micali on where crypto 
is headed.
https://www.inquirer.com/business/technology/cyrpto-mit-pioneer-micali-blockchain-20220508.html
"About 40 years ago, Silvio Micali and his colleague Shafi Goldwasser wanted to 
figure out how to play poker together on their phones. They needed a way to 
ensure that neither could know the other player’s hands.
The two computer science graduate students at the University of 
California-Berkeley drew up what Micali calls "the first secure encryption 
scheme the world has ever seen." For their invention, which proved vital to the 
modern internet, they were awarded the A.M. Turing Award, considered 
computing's equivalent of the Nobel Prize.

Today, Micali, 67, is focused on another application of encryption: the 
blockchain, which is the foundation of bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies. At 
the Milken Institute Global Conference last week , the MIT professor promoted 
Algorand, a blockchain he developed that he says is greener, faster and more 
secure than other protocols.

Blockchains are typically described as public ledgers where transactions are 
recorded on an open network. Validating a set of transactions to add to the 
ledger is one of the biggest security challenges. Algorand says it uses a novel 
approach involving the random selection of its users to ensure blocks of 
transactions are more resistant to hacks, which cost cryptocurrency holders a 
record $14 billion last year by one tally."

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