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Dahlia Malkhi

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Dahlia Malkhi is an Israeli-American computer scientist who works on distributed systems as a founding principal researcher at VMware Research.[1]

Malkhi earned her bachelor's, master's, and doctoral degrees from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, finishing her Ph.D. in 1994 under the supervision of Danny Dolev.[1][2] She taught at the Hebrew University until 2007, and then joined Microsoft Research at their Silicon Valley research center. In 2014, when Microsoft closed the center, she moved to VMware,[1] a company working in server virtualization founded by a group of former researchers from Microsoft Silicon Valley.[3]

In 2011, Malkhi became a Fellow of the Association for Computing Machinery "for contributions to fault-tolerant distributed computing."[4]

Selected publications

  • Malkhi, Dahlia; Reiter, Michael (1998), "Byzantine quorum systems", Distributed Computing, 11 (4): 203–213, doi:10.1007/s004460050050. Preliminary version in ACM Symposium on Theory of Computing, STOC '97, doi:10.1145/258533.258650.
  • Malkhi, Dahlia; Naor, Moni; Ratajczak, David (2002), "Viceroy: A scalable and dynamic emulation of the butterfly", Proceedings of the Twenty-first Annual Symposium on Principles of Distributed Computing (PODC '02), New York, NY, USA: ACM, pp. 183–192, doi:10.1145/571825.571857, ISBN 1-58113-485-1.
  • Malkhi, Dahlia; Nisan, Noam; Pinkas, Benny; Sella, Yaron (2004), "Fairplay – a secure two-party computation system", Proceedings of the 13th USENIX Security Symposium (Sec. '04), Berkeley, CA, USA: USENIX Association.

References