Summary
Wilson Nguyen is a senior researcher at Microsoft Research and incoming Stanford PhD graduate who specializes in cryptographic networking protocols, with 11 years of hands-on experience in security engineering and Internet-scale measurement. His work spans academic research under advisor Dan Boneh, practical mass internet scanning and tooling from time in Zakir Durumeric’s lab, and applied vulnerability research at Google and Praetorian, blending rigorous cryptography with real-world adversary thinking. He has taught hands-on cyber offense/defense labs at Stanford, giving him a practitioner’s perspective on how protocols fail in the wild as well as how to design mitigations. Based in the Greater Seattle Area, he combines deep theory with production-minded security engineering, frequently moving between research prototypes and deployment-scale scanning infrastructure. Notably, his background includes patching and maintaining core scanning libraries and building detection signals for dangerous cloud configurations, highlighting an uncommon mix of low-level tooling and high-assurance cryptographic design.
11 years of coding experience
2 years of employment as a software developer
Doctor of Philosophy - PhD, Computer Science, Doctor of Philosophy - PhD, Computer Science at Stanford University
English, Vietnamese, Japanese