Alan Turing's Doctorate & Knighthood Medal Recovered 36 Years After Theft (bizwest.com) 22
Slashdot reader McGruber shares the news that several of Alan Turing's historic personal effects have been recovered nearly 36 years after they were stolen. From a report:
In filings in the U.S. District Court of Colorado Friday, federal officials say they seized the British mathematician's Princeton University degree, his Order of the British Empire medal and several photos, school reports and letters from his time at Sherborne School, a boarding school in Dorset, England.
According to the seizure notices, a woman named Julia Turing approached the University of Colorado Boulder in January 2018, saying she wanted to loan Alan Turing's memorabilia to the library. Archivists at the library determined that the items were stolen from Sherborne in 1984... Julia Turing isn't related to Alan Turing, but she changed her last name from Schwinghamer in 1988, according to the complaint...
A month after she reached out to the University of Colorado Boulder, federal officials searched Julia Turing's home in Conifer and recovered the items.
The Guardian shared this quote from a member of the government committee that decided Turing should appear on the U.K.'s new £50 note.
"[He was] the father of computer science, a significant influence on the modern field of artificial intelligence and most importantly, his work at Bletchley Park during the second world war led a team of code-breakers to crack the German Enigma code."
According to the seizure notices, a woman named Julia Turing approached the University of Colorado Boulder in January 2018, saying she wanted to loan Alan Turing's memorabilia to the library. Archivists at the library determined that the items were stolen from Sherborne in 1984... Julia Turing isn't related to Alan Turing, but she changed her last name from Schwinghamer in 1988, according to the complaint...
A month after she reached out to the University of Colorado Boulder, federal officials searched Julia Turing's home in Conifer and recovered the items.
The Guardian shared this quote from a member of the government committee that decided Turing should appear on the U.K.'s new £50 note.
"[He was] the father of computer science, a significant influence on the modern field of artificial intelligence and most importantly, his work at Bletchley Park during the second world war led a team of code-breakers to crack the German Enigma code."
Tommy Flowers (Score:3)
Tommy Flowers should perhaps be credited with breaking Enigma -- by being the main force behind the design and construction of Colossus.
Re:Tommy Flowers (Score:5, Informative)
breaking Enigma ... Colossus
That would be the Lorenz cipher. Enigma was decrypted using the Bombe machines.
Einstein Award (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
You are correct on that point and I was wrong. But....
Re:Tommy Flowers (Score:4, Interesting)
Breaking one code or another was far from Turing's sole contribution. He also did seminal work on the entire statistical framework for reasoning about the fragmentary and perplexing nature of the information gleaned, which is far more difficult than most people presume.
Colossus computer [wikipedia.org]
Cryptanalysis of the Lorenz cipher [wikipedia.org]
Colossal Genius: Tutte, Flowers, and a Bad Imitation of Turing [acm.org] (2017) by Thomas Haigh
The article cites Tutte in particular as someone who could be given a lot more credit as a cryptologist.
I didn't actually hate The Imitation Game (2014), but it certainly was wretched history, motivated by a wretched obsession by the fake Turing.
She had a "crush" on Turing (Score:5, Informative)
Source [theregister.co.uk] - overall a more thorough article than the OP's
Re: (Score:2)
Thank you! The articles linked in the OP were confusing.
Re: (Score:2)
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They awarded him a prestigious degree, honored him with rank....
and don't forget persecuted him for being gay, chemically castrated him, and drove him to commit suicide.
But I guess it's okay since he was given an OBE.
More white males on the money?
Go fuck yourself.
Re: (Score:2)
Your forgetting Jane Austen on the back of the current English £10 note. The current RBS £5 has Nan Shepard and their £10 has Mary Somerville. The current Clydesdale £50 has Elsie Inglis on it, their old £10 had Mary Slessor on it. Plenty of women on banknotes of the Pound Sterling.
Crazy Julia (Score:2)
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But which one? (Score:2)
...a member of the government committee that decided Turing should appear on the U.K.'s new £50 note.
So Julia Turing is copped for stealing Alan Turing's personal effects and they're going to put her likeness on a £50 note? That's outrageous!
Re: (Score:2)
It is certainly outrageous.
Not a knight (Score:2)
The OBE honour is not a knighthood. He's not "Sir Alan Turing". The original story gets this wrong. https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wik... [wikipedia.org]
Alan Turing did NOT crack or break German Enigma c (Score:2)
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Dear Britons, kindly get it finally straight: Alan Turing did NOT crack or break German Enigma code. Three brilliant Polish mathematicians had done it and provided solution to the French and your secret service in August, 1939.
Yes and no. The Polish work was indispensable and is credited in any decent history you might actually pay for instead of being slapped together by idiots online. On the other hand, it was not enough to break every Enigma message on what was basically an industrial scale. That was another hard step and it wasn't simply a case of mechanically applying the Polish work to a cyphertext. Without Turing (and Flowers and everyone else) the Polish work would not have been useful in its own right.
As with most of WWI
Re: Alan Turing did NOT crack or break German Enig (Score:1)
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The British propaganda machine is a good (or better) as the Soviet/Russian and American one and your âoeyes-noâ reply is the living proof of it.
The official stance of British cryptography from the pre-WW2 time on breaking Enigma was that the code CANNOT be broken. Turningâ(TM)s team implemented polish idea on âoeindustrialâ scale. The poles provided the solution. Period.
If you like you can spin it that way. In reality the Polish work was not enough and neither was the British work.
Sorry if real life isn't black and white enough for your rose-tinted glasses.