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Prof Kenneth Paterson obtained a BSc in 1990 from the University of Glasgow and a PhD from the University of London in 1993, both in Mathematics. He was then a Royal Society Fellow at Institute for Signal and Information Processing at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology, Zurich, from 1993 to 1994. After that, he was a Lloyd's of London Tercentenary Foundation Research Fellow at Royal Holloway, University of London from 1994 to 1996. In 1996, he joined Hewlett-Packard Laboratories Bristol, becoming a project manager in 1999. He then joined the Information Security Group at Royal Holloway in 2001, becoming a Reader in 2002 and Professor in 2004. From March 2010 to May 2015, he was an EPSRC Leadership Fellow working on a project entitled "Cryptography: Bridging Theory and Practice". In May 2015, he reverted to being a Professor of Information Security. Kenny was program chair of Eurocrypt 2011, invited speaker at Asiacrypt 2014, and currently serves as Editor-in-Chief for the Journal of Cryptology. He is a co-founder of the "Real World Cryptography" workshop series. He also serves on the Executive Steering Board of the IoT Security Foundation, as co-chair of the Crypto Forum Research Group of the IRTF, and on the technical advisory board of SkyHighNetworks. His research over the last decade has mostly been in the area of Cryptography, with a strong emphasis being on the analysis of deployed cryptographic systems and the development of provably secure solutions to real-world cryptographic problems. He is a winner of an Applied Networking Research Prize from the IRTF for his work on the Lucky 13 attack on TLS; a PETS award for Outstanding Research in Privacy Enhancing Technologies for his work with Mihir Bellare and Phil Rogaway on the Security of symmetric encryption against mass surveillance published at CRYPTO 2014; and a winner of a best paper award at ACM CCS 2016, with Martin Albrecht, Jean Paul Degabriele and Torben Hansen, for their work on SSH.