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Frank A. Stevenson

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Frank A. Stevenson (born 1970) is a Norwegian software developer, and part-time cryptanalyst. He is primarily known for his exposition of weaknesses in the DVD Forum's Content Scramble System (CSS).[1] Although the cryptoanalysis was done independently, he is known for his relations to DeCSS,[2] and appeared before the courts as a witness in the Jon Johansen court trial. He also gave a deposition for the DVD CCA v. McLaughlin, Bunner, et al. case.

Stevenson worked for Funcom as a game developer for many years, after which he moved to Kvaleberg to work on mobile phone software. In July 2010, Stevenson published information about vulnerabilities in the A5/1 encryption algorithm used by most 2G GSM networks, and also showed the Kraken software, that demonstrates that the crypto indeed can be broken with modest hardware.[3]

Games credited

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Stevenson has been credited with the following video games:[4]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Frank Stevenson's CSS Cracks - A compilation of links relating to Stevenson's CSS analysis
  2. ^ CSS cryptoanalysis
  3. ^ New 'Kraken' GSM-cracking software is released, Computerworld, July 21, 2010.
  4. ^ "Frank Andrew Stevensen Video Game Credits and Biography".