Kipp Hickman designed and implemented SSL v2 in just three months in late 1994, enabling Netscape Navigator to support encrypted web communication. His pragmatic approach prioritized preventing passive attacks and included man-in-the-middle protection as an afterthought. This foundational work, released with Navigator 1.1 in March 1995, evolved into SSL v3 and eventually became the TLS protocol that secures modern web traffic. Despite his pivotal contribution to web security and encryption, Hickman remains underrecognized in cryptography history.
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