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Ralph Merkle

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Ralph C. Merkle (born 1952) is an American computer scientist who invented public-key cryptography as an undergraduate at Berkeley in 1974 — two years before Whitfield Diffie and Martin Hellman published their independent discovery. Merkle's scheme, known as Merkle's puzzles, used a computationally asymmetric puzzle-and-solution protocol to establish shared secrets over public channels. The asymmetry was primitive — the legitimate parties performed linear work while an eavesdropper faced quadratic cost — but the conceptual breakthrough was decisive: for the first time, cryptography could function without prior shared secrecy. Merkle later co-invented the Merkle tree, a hash-based data structure that became fundamental to blockchain architectures and tamper-evident logging systems, proving that his instincts for minimal-trust design would shape decades of secure infrastructure.