Kenneth P. Weiss

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Kenneth P. Weiss is an American entrepreneur, human factors engineer and inventor. He invented the SecurID Card,[1] now a trademark of RSA Security.

Career[edit]

Weiss holds a bachelor's degree from the University of Bridgeport, continued graduate studies and research at the University of New Hampshire and Temple University, and received a doctorate from the Neotarian Fellowship.[citation needed]

He founded Security Dynamics in 1984 and served as CEO until 1986 and chairman of the board and CTO until 1996. He initiated the purchase in 1993 of RSA Security, then a small encryption company working in internet commerce. In 1994, Security Dynamics went public on the NASDAQ stock exchange. Weiss was the company's largest individual shareholder.[citation needed]. The company developed and sold the SecurID Card and RSA encryption technologies for computer security, electronic commerce and identity authentication. He resigned in 1996 citing policy disagreements with directors and with the company's operations and policies,[2][3] when the company had achieved a market capitalization of more than $4 billion[citation needed] In 2006 the company was purchased by EMC Corporation.

In 1994 he published an article enumerating what he regarded as seven significant flaws in the Clipper chip initiative.[4] Weiss’ position and the article contributed to the abandonment of the multibillion-dollar U.S. government program, which Weiss asserted would have allowed electronic eavesdropping on any US citizen with a surveillance chip embedded in private electronic communication equipment.[citation needed]

Weiss has taught at Penn State, the University of Bridgeport, Nasson College, and at King's College, where he was chairman of the psychology department for seven years as a professor and textbook author.[citation needed]

He was on the editorial board of the Journal of Information Systems Security, and was chairman of the identification and authentication division of the American Defense Preparedness Association's committee on computer security.[citation needed] He is also a member of the Technology and Ethics Committee of the Information Systems Security Association (ISSA).[citation needed]

Currently, Weiss is the founder and CEO of Universal Secure Registry (USR), a company based in Newton, Massachusetts, that develops technologies for identification, authentication and mobile phone applications.[5]

He holds 22 U.S. patents, as well as foreign patents.[citation needed]

Awards and recognition[edit]

Weiss is a member of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, and the honor societies Sigma Xi and Psi Chi.[citation needed]

Philanthropic work[edit]

Weiss is also involved philanthropic work for the Cape Ann Symphony, Rockport Chamber Music Society, Gloucester Stage Co., the Gloucester Schooner Festival, historical meeting house restoration, the Cape Ann Historical Association, the Perfect Storm Foundation, Addison Gilbert and Beverly Hospitals, the Lahey Clinic, and political action groups[which?].

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Definition of: SecurID card". Encyclopedia. PC Magazine. Retrieved 2008-06-02.
  2. ^ "Security Dynamics announces resignation of Kenneth P. Weiss as chairman, director and chief technical officer". Business Wire. 22 May 1996. Retrieved 10 November 2014.
  3. ^ Dave Kearns (13 September 2011). "Stupid, arrogant and greedy". Network World. Retrieved 10 November 2014.
  4. ^ Weiss, Kenneth P. "New Initiatives which May Erode Your Privacy: Or George Orwell Was Off by Only a Decade". Information Management & Computer Security. 2 (3). Emerald Group Publishing. doi:10.1108/09685229410792943. ISSN 0968-5227.
  5. ^ "Can Kenneth Weiss, founder of Security Dynamics, become a key player in mobile payments?". Boston Globe. 27 June 2011. Retrieved 10 November 2014.