Green currently holds the position of Associate Professor at the Johns Hopkins Information Security Institute. He teaches courses pertaining to practical cryptography. Green is part of the group which developed
Zerocoin, an anonymous
cryptocurrency protocol. Zerocoin is a proposed extension to the
Bitcoin protocol that would add
anonymity to
Bitcoin transactions. Zerocoin provides anonymity by the introduction of a separate
zerocoin cryptocurrency that is stored in the Bitcoin block chain. Though originally proposed for use with the Bitcoin network, zerocoin could be integrated into any
cryptocurrency. His research team has exposed flaws in more than one third of
SSL/TLS encrypted web sites as well as vulnerabilities in encryption technologies, including
RSA BSAFE, Exxon/Mobil
Speedpass,
E-ZPass, and automotive security systems. In 2015, Green was a member of the research team that identified the
Logjam vulnerability in the TLS protocol. Green started his career in 1999 at
AT&T Laboratories in Florham Park, New Jersey. At AT&T Labs he worked on a variety of projects including audio coding/secure content distribution, streaming video and wireless localization services. As a graduate student he co-founded Independent Security Evaluators (ISE) with two fellow students and Avi Rubin in 2005. Green served as CTO of ISE until his departure in 2011. He also co-founded Security Companies: Zeutro and Sealance. Green is a member of the technical advisory board for the Linux Foundation Core Infrastructure Initiative, formed to address critical Internet security concerns in the wake of the
Heartbleed security bug disclosed in April 2014 in the
OpenSSL cryptography library. He sits on the technical advisory boards for
CipherCloud, Overnest and Mozilla Cybersecurity Delphi. Green co-founded and serves on the Board for Directors of the Open Crypto Audit Project (OCAP), which undertook a
security audit of the
TrueCrypt software. ==References==