Paterson was a Royal Society Fellow at Institute for Signal and Information Processing at ETH Zurich from 1993 to 1994. In 1996, he joined Hewlett-Packard Laboratories Bristol. 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".[7] In May 2015, he returned to working as a professor. He became the Editor in Chief for the IACR's Journal of Cryptology.[8]
Research
Paterson is notable for attacks on the Encapsulating Security Payload in IPSec, the Lucky 13 attack on TLS, attacks on the use of RC4 in TLS and on use of CBC mode in the SSH protocol. He also worked on improved security models proving protocols secure against such attacks.[9][10]
Awards
Distinguished Paper Award for work with Nadhem AlFardan presenting plaintext recovery attacks against DTLS published at NDSS 2012[11]
Applied Networking Research Prize from the IRTF for work with Nadhem AlFardan on the Lucky 13 attack[12]
Award for Outstanding Research in Privacy Enhancing Technologies for work with Mihir Bellare and Phil Rogaway on the Security of symmetric encryption against mass surveillance published at CRYPTO 2014.[13]
Best Paper Award at ACM CCS 2016 for work with Martin Albrecht, Jean Paul Degabriele and Torben Hansen on symmetric encryption in SSH[14]
^Albrecht, Martin R.; Degabriele, Jean Paul; Hansen, Torben Brandt; Paterson, Kenneth G. "A Surfeit of SSH Cipher Suites"(PDF). Retrieved 5 February 2017.