Goldman Irwin L
Department of Horticulture, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Wisconsin 53706
Genetics. 2017 May;206(1):1-8. doi: 10.1534/genetics.117.201624.
William Friedman (1891-1969), trained as a plant geneticist at Cornell University, was employed at Riverbank Laboratories by the eccentric millionaire George Fabyan to work on wheat breeding. Friedman, however, soon became intrigued by and started working on a pet project of Fabyan's involving the conjecture that Francis Bacon, a polymath known for the study of ciphers, was the real author of Shakespeare's plays. Thus, beginning in ∼1916, Friedman turned his attention to the so called "Baconian cipher," and developed decryption techniques that bore similarity to approaches for solving problems in population genetics. His most significant, indeed pathbreaking, work used ideas from genetics and statistics, focusing on analysis of the frequencies of letters in language use. Although he had transitioned from being a geneticist to a cryptographer, his earlier work had resonance in his later pursuits. He soon began working directly for the United States government and produced solutions used to solve complex military ciphers, in particular to break the Japanese code during World War II. Another important legacy of his work was the establishment of the Signal Intelligence Service and eventually the National Security Agency.
威廉·弗里德曼(1891 - 1969),曾在康奈尔大学接受植物遗传学家的培训,受雇于河岸实验室,为古怪的百万富翁乔治·法比安从事小麦育种工作。然而,弗里德曼很快就被法比安的一个私人项目所吸引,并开始参与其中,该项目推测以密码研究而闻名的博学家弗朗西斯·培根是莎士比亚戏剧的真正作者。于是,从大约1916年开始,弗里德曼将注意力转向了所谓的“培根密码”,并开发了与解决群体遗传学问题的方法相似的解密技术。他最重要、实际上具有开创性的工作运用了遗传学和统计学的思想,专注于对语言使用中字母频率的分析。尽管他已从遗传学家转变为密码学家,但他早期的工作在他后来的追求中仍有影响。他很快开始直接为美国政府工作,并提供了用于破解复杂军事密码的解决方案,尤其是在二战期间破解日本密码。他工作的另一个重要遗产是信号情报局的成立以及最终国家安全局的建立。