Barbara Simons

Last updated
Barbara B. Simons
Barbara Simons 1.jpg
Born (1941-01-26) January 26, 1941 (age 82)
NationalityAmerican
Alma mater University of California, Berkeley
Known for voting technology
election security
information security
Spouse
(m. 1959;div. 1974)
Scientific career
Fields Computer science
Institutions
Doctoral advisor Richard M. Karp

Barbara Bluestein Simons (born January 26, 1941) is an American computer scientist and the former president of the Association for Computing Machinery (ACM). She is a Ph.D. graduate of the University of California, Berkeley and spent her early career working as an IBM researcher. She is the founder and former co-chair of USACM, the ACM U.S. Public Policy Council. Her main areas of research are compiler optimization, scheduling theory and algorithm analysis and design.

Contents

Simons has worked for technology regulation since 2002, where she advocates for the end of electronic voting. She subsequently serves as the chairperson of the Verified Voting Foundation and coauthored a book on the flaws of electronic voting entitled Broken Ballots, with Douglas W. Jones.

Early life

Simons was born in Boston, Massachusetts and grew up in Cincinnati, Ohio. In high school, she developed an interest for math and science while taking A.P. Math classes. She attended Wellesley College for a year, before moving to California in 1959 to resume her undergraduate education at Berkeley. There, she married James Harris Simons. [1] At the beginning of her junior year she gave birth to a daughter, Liz, and dropped out of Berkeley shortly thereafter to become a mother and a housewife. In this time she decided to pursue a profession in Computer Programming, and began taking computer science classes part-time, before enrolling in graduate school at Stony Brook University. [2] [3] After a year of graduate school there, James Harris Simons and she divorced in 1974. [4]

Simons transferred back to Berkeley for the remainder of graduate school, where she concentrated on studying scheduling theory and helped co-found the Women in Computer Science and Engineering club (WiCSE). [3] In 1981, she received her Ph.D. in Computer Science. She received a Distinguished Engineering Alumni Award from Berkeley's College of Engineering. [3]

Career

1981-1998: IBM

After leaving the Berkeley in 1981, Simons began her career at Research Division of IBM in their Research Division in San Jose. There, she worked on compiler optimization, algorithm analysis, and clock synchronization, which she won an IBM Research Division Award for. [3] In 1992, she began working as a senior programmer in IBM's Applications Development Technology Institute and subsequently as a senior technology adviser for IBM Global Services. [5]

Over the course of her career at IBM, her interests shifted from research to the policy and regulation of technology. [2] She took early retirement from IBM in 1998 after spending 17 years with the company. [6] [7]

1993-2002: ACM

After leaving IBM in 1998, Simons served as president of the Association for Computing Machinery (ACM), the largest computing society in the world, until 2000. [8] She joined ACM when her career focus shifted from computing research to the politics of technology legislation. Prior to becoming the ACM president, Simons founded ACM's US Public Policy Committee (USACM) in 1993. She co-chaired this committee along with the ACM Committee for Scientific Freedom and Human Rights for 9 years. As president, she co-chaired the ACM study of statewide databases of voters in 1999 under President Clinton, called Voter Registration Databases 2000–2002. [9] [10] In 1999 she was elected secretary of the Council of Scientific Society Presidents (CSSP) as ACM President. In 2001 after her time as president, she received ACM's Outstanding Contribution Award. She is still a Fellow of ACM and the American Association for the Advancement of Science. [10]

2008–Present: The Verified Voting Foundation

Since 2008, Simons has served on the board of directors of the Verified Voting Foundation, a non-partisan and non-profit organization that advocates for legislation to promote the safest and most transparent voting. [11] The group's goals are to ensure that states and municipalities across America adopt voting technology best practices. [3] [12] [13]

Other work

Simons helped found the Reentry Program for Women and Minorities at U.C. Berkeley in the Computer Science Department. [11] She also serves on the boards of the Coalition to Diversify Computing (CDC) and the Berkeley Foundation for Opportunities in Information Technology (BFOIT), both which promote minorities to learn and work in computing. [5]

In 2005 Simons became the first woman ever to receive the Distinguished Engineering Alumni Award from the U.C. Berkeley's College of Engineering. [3] [4]

She is a member of the board of directors at the U.C. Berkeley Engineering Fund, the Electronic Privacy Information Center, and sits on the Advisory Boards of the Oxford Internet Institute. [6]

Simons has also served as a professor at Stanford University.

Voting technology policy

After leaving IBM and serving as ACM president, Simons began working to reverse the dangers of using unverifiable technology in voting. In 2001 she participated in the National Workshop on Internet Voting under President Clinton, where she helped produce a report on Internet voting. She subsequently served on the President's Export Council's Subcommittee on Encryption, as well as on the Information Technology-Sector of the President's Council on the Year 2000 Conversion. [6] Barbara held one of her first public outcries of unverifiable voting technology in 2003 because election officials in Silicon Valley wanted to switch to paperless machines. Now, Barbara serves as a board chair at Verified Voting. [14] She also co-chaired the ACM study of statewide databases of registered voters alongside Paula Hawthorn. [9] She participated on the Security Peer Review Group for the US Department of Defense’s Internet voting project (SERVE) and co-authored the report that led to the cancellation of SERVE because of security concerns 2004. [15] [16] [11]

In addition to serving on the Board of Directors of the Verified Voting Foundation, Simons has worked for legislation to remove paperless voting machines and published various work about it. She played a key role in changing the League of Women Voters support and use of paperless voting. [17] Initially the League had seen electronic voting as better for disabled people, then endorsed voting machines that are "recountable" after Simons. [17] In 2008 she was appointed by Senator Harry Reid to the U.S Election Assistance Commission Board of Advisors, where she contributed to "Help America Vote Act" (HAVA). [11] In 2009 she co-authored the League of Women Voters report on election auditing. [18] With fellow computer scientist Douglas Jones, she co-authored a book about electronic voting machines in 2012, titled Broken Ballots: Will Your Vote Count?. [19] [11] Following this, in July 2015 she published another report about electronic voting for the U.S. Vote Foundation entitled The Future of Voting: End-to-End Verifiable Internet Voting.

Awards and honors

Related Research Articles

The Association for Computing Machinery (ACM) is a US-based international learned society for computing. It was founded in 1947 and is the world's largest scientific and educational computing society. The ACM is a non-profit professional membership group, claiming nearly 110,000 student and professional members as of 2022. Its headquarters are in New York City.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">David Patterson (computer scientist)</span> American computer pioneer and academic (born 1947)

David Andrew Patterson is an American computer pioneer and academic who has held the position of professor of computer science at the University of California, Berkeley since 1976. He announced retirement in 2016 after serving nearly forty years, becoming a distinguished software engineer at Google. He currently is vice chair of the board of directors of the RISC-V Foundation, and the Pardee Professor of Computer Science, Emeritus at UC Berkeley.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Shafi Goldwasser</span> Israeli American computer scientist

Shafrira Goldwasser is an Israeli-American computer scientist and winner of the Turing Award in 2012. She is the RSA Professor of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science at Massachusetts Institute of Technology; a professor of mathematical sciences at the Weizmann Institute of Science, Israel; the director of the Simons Institute for the Theory of Computing at the University of California, Berkeley; and co-founder and chief scientist of Duality Technologies.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Barbara Liskov</span> American computer scientist

Barbara Liskov is an American computer scientist who has made pioneering contributions to programming languages and distributed computing. Her notable work includes the development of the Liskov substitution principle which describes the fundamental nature of data abstraction, and is used in type theory and in object-oriented programming. Her work was recognized with the 2008 Turing Award, the highest distinction in computer science.

Brent Hailpern is a computer scientist retired from IBM Research. His research work focused on programming languages, software engineering, and concurrency.

Christine L. Borgman is Distinguished Professor and Presidential Chair in Information Studies at UCLA. She is the author of more than 200 publications in the fields of information studies, computer science, and communication. Two of her sole-authored monographs, Scholarship in the Digital Age: Information, Infrastructure, and the Internet and From Gutenberg to the Global Information Infrastructure: Access to Information in a Networked World, have won the Best Information Science Book of the Year award from the American Society for Information Science and Technology. She is a lead investigator for the Center for Embedded Networked Sensing (CENS), a National Science Foundation Science and Technology Center, where she conducts data practices research. She chaired the Task Force on Cyberlearning for the NSF, whose report, Fostering Learning in the Networked World, was released in July, 2008. Prof. Borgman is a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS), a Legacy Laureate of the University of Pittsburgh, and is the 2011 recipient of the Paul Evan Peters Award from the Coalition for Networked Information, Association for Research Libraries, and EDUCAUSE. The award recognizes notable, lasting achievements in the creation and innovative use of information resources and services that advance scholarship and intellectual productivity through communication networks. She is also the 2011 recipient of the Research in Information Science Award from the American Association of Information Science and Technology. In 2013 she became a fellow of the Association for Computing Machinery.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Frances Allen</span> American computer scientist (1932–2020)

Frances Elizabeth Allen was an American computer scientist and pioneer in the field of optimizing compilers. Allen was the first woman to become an IBM Fellow, and in 2006 became the first woman to win the Turing Award. Her achievements include seminal work in compilers, program optimization, and parallelization. She worked for IBM from 1957 to 2002 and subsequently was a Fellow Emerita.

Kanianthra Mani Chandy is the Simon Ramo Professor of Computer Science at the California Institute of Technology (Caltech). He has been the Executive Officer of the Computer Science Department twice, and he has been a professor at Caltech since 1989. He also served as Chair of the Division of Engineering and Applied Science at the California Institute of Technology.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Eric Brewer (scientist)</span>

Eric Allen Brewer is professor emeritus of computer science at the University of California, Berkeley and vice-president of infrastructure at Google. His research interests include operating systems and distributed computing. He is known for formulating the CAP theorem about distributed network applications in the late 1990s.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Annie Antón</span> American computer scientist

Annie Antón is an academic and researcher in the fields of computer science, mathematical logic, and bioinformatics.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">P. Venkat Rangan</span>

Prof. P. Venkat Rangan is an Indian computer scientist. He is the current vice chancellor of Amrita University. A pioneer of research in Multimedia Systems, he was the founder and director of the Multimedia Laboratory at the University of California, San Diego, where he served as a Professor of Computer Science and Engineering. By the age of 33 he was one of the youngest full professors at University of California, San Diego. Dr. Rangan also founded Yodlee Inc. and served as its CEO, for which in 2000, he was selected as one of the 25 best entrepreneurs by the President of the United States of America and featured on the July 2000 cover of Internet World Magazine.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ruzena Bajcsy</span> American computer scientist

Ruzena Bajcsy is an American engineer and computer scientist who specializes in robotics. She is professor of electrical engineering and computer science at the University of California, Berkeley, where she is also director emerita of CITRIS.

Dawn Song is a Chinese American academic and is a professor at the University of California, Berkeley, in the Electrical Engineering and Computer Science Department.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Marti Hearst</span> American computer scientist

Marti Hearst is a professor in the School of Information at the University of California, Berkeley. She did early work in corpus-based computational linguistics, including some of the first work in automating sentiment analysis, and word sense disambiguation. She invented an algorithm that became known as "Hearst patterns" which applies lexico-syntactic patterns to recognize hyponymy (ISA) relations with high accuracy in large text collections, including an early application of it to WordNet; this algorithm is widely used in commercial text mining applications including ontology learning. Hearst also developed early work in automatic segmentation of text into topical discourse boundaries, inventing a now well-known approach called TextTiling.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Katherine Yelick</span> American computer scientist and academic

Katherine "Kathy" Anne Yelick, an American computer scientist, is the Vice Chancellor for Research and the Robert S. Pepper Professor of Electrical Engineering and Computer Sciences at the University of California, Berkeley. She is also a faculty scientist at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, where she was Associate Laboratory Director for Computing Sciences from 2010-2019.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Barbara J. Grosz</span> American computer scientist (born 1948)

Barbara J. Grosz CorrFRSE is an American computer scientist and Higgins Professor of Natural Sciences at Harvard University. She has made seminal contributions to the fields of natural language processing and multi-agent systems. With Alison Simmons, she is co-founder of the Embedded EthiCS programme at Harvard, which embeds ethics lessons into computer science courses.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Timeline of women in computing</span>

This is a timeline of women in computing. It covers the time when women worked as "human computers" and then as programmers of physical computers. Eventually, women programmers went on to write software, develop Internet technologies and other types of programming. Women have also been involved in computer science, various related types of engineering and computer hardware.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Vicki L. Hanson</span> American computer scientist

Vicki Hanson FACM FRSE FBCS, is an American computer scientist noted for her research on human-computer interaction and accessibility and for her leadership in broadening participation in computing.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Prabhat Mishra</span> American computer scientist

Prabhat Mishra is a Professor in the Department of Computer and Information Science and Engineering and a UF Research Foundation Professor at the University of Florida. Prof. Mishra's research interests are in hardware security, quantum computing, embedded systems, system-on-chip validation, formal verification, and machine learning.

Paula Birdwell Hawthorn is an American computer scientist. She is recognised as an expert and pioneer in database systems. She has also founded organisations for women in computer science and created affirmative action programs to support students in the field.

References

  1. "James Simons". Forbes. Retrieved 2018-04-30.
  2. 1 2 Leovy, Jill. "Meet the Computer Scientist Championing Paper Ballots". The Atlantic. Retrieved 2018-04-30.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 "Q&A with Barbara Simons". Berkeley Engineering. 2018-03-16. Retrieved 2018-04-24.
  4. 1 2 Teitlebaum, R. (2008, January). The Code Breaker. Bloomberg Magazine.
  5. 1 2 "Doug Engelbart's Colloquium at Stanford | Biography: Barbara Simons". dougengelbart.org. Retrieved 2018-04-30.
  6. 1 2 3 Abate, J. (2002, July 11). Oral-History: Barbara Simons. Retrieved April 20, 2018, from http://ethw.org/Oral-History:Barbara_Simons
  7. 1 2 King Liu, Tsu-Jae (2019-10-11). "Berkeley Talks transcript: Barbara Simons on election hacking and how to avoid it in 2020". Berkeley News. Retrieved 2020-09-14.
  8. Admin, MemberClicks. "Home". www.usacm.org. Retrieved 2018-05-01.
  9. 1 2 Paula Hawthorn and Barbara Simons (co-chairs), Statewide Databases of Registered Voters: Study Of Accuracy, Privacy, Usability, Security, and Reliability Issues, U.S. Public Policy Committee of the Association for Computing Machinery, Feb. 2006.
  10. 1 2 "Association for Computing Machinery". techpolicy.acm.org. Retrieved 2018-05-01.
  11. 1 2 3 4 5 United States, SFGOV. Election Commissions.
  12. "Update on Efforts to Ensure Accurate, Verifiable Elections". All Together. 2020-01-23. Retrieved 2020-09-14.
  13. "VerifiedVoting.org". Verified Voting. 2009-10-28. Archived from the original on 2017-10-05. Retrieved 2018-05-01.
  14. 1 2 "Barbara Simons: Making votes count". Berkeley Engineering. 2018-05-09. Retrieved 2020-09-14.
  15. David Jefferson, Aviel D. Rubin, Barbara Simons and David Wagner, A Security Analysis of the Secure Electronic Registration and Voting Experiment (SERVE) Archived 2011-11-04 at the Wayback Machine , Jan. 20, 2004.
  16. Press Release, [Pentagon Decides Against Internet Voting "Defense.gov News Article: Pentagon Decides Against Internet Voting This Year". Archived from the original on 2012-04-14. Retrieved 2012-01-04.], American Forces Press Service, Feb. 6, 2004.
  17. 1 2 Ronnie Dugger, "How They Could Steal the Election This Time", The Nation , p.13 August 16/23, 2004
  18. Election Audits Task Force, Report on Election Auditing, League of Women Voters of the United States, Jan. 2009.
  19. Douglas W. Jones and Barbara Simons, Broken Ballots, Center for the Study of Language and Information / University of Chicago Press, 2012. See also
  20. "Pioneer Awards: Past Winners". Electronic Frontier Foundation. 2017-06-28. Retrieved 2020-09-14.
  21. None, David (2005-09-15). "Barbara Simons receives UC Berkeley Lifetime Achievement Award". techpolicy.acm.org. Retrieved 2020-09-14.
  22. "Barbara Simons Receives 2019 ACM Policy Award". Association for Computing Machinery (ACM). 2020-07-01. Retrieved 2020-09-14.