Universität Bonn

Institute of Computer Science

14. April 2025

From the BSI to the lecture hall: Dr. Gerhard Schabhüser strengthens cryptography teaching at the Institute of Computer Science From the BSI to the lecture hall: Dr. Gerhard Schabhüser strengthens cryptography teaching

“ Shape information technology - but with common sense.”

With the start of the summer semester 2025, the Institute of Computer Science is gaining a lecturer with impressive practical experience: Dr. Gerhard Schabhüser, long-time Vice President of the Federal Office for Information Security (BSI), is now bringing his knowledge to university teaching. With his lecture “Classical Cryptography, Cryptanalysis and Boolean Functions”, he is building a bridge between theory and application-oriented security technology.

The lecture “Classical cryptography, cryptanalysis and Boolean functions” with Dr. Gerhard Schabhüser started at the beginning of April
The lecture “Classical cryptography, cryptanalysis and Boolean functions” with Dr. Gerhard Schabhüser started at the beginning of April © Christian Bungartz | Universität Bonn
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After many years in the management of public authorities, the move to the lecture hall is not a new beginning for Schabhüser, rather a return: he already enjoyed teaching during his time as a research assistant at the University of Münster and the FernUniversität in Hagen. Today, his motivation to return to university education stems primarily from one aspiration: to teach students not only the theoretical foundations, but also the practical tools of cryptography.

Cryptanalysis, probability models and practical relevance

The content of his course reflects this attitude. They range from methods of practical decryption and the theory of perfect security to the analysis and design of modern encryption systems. Probability models, Boolean functions and linear approximations as cryptanalysis tools are also on the agenda — always combined with concrete application examples.

Schabhüser is particularly interested in not only explaining mathematical concepts in abstract terms, but also making their implementation in real algorithms comprehensible. “Cryptography is a basic technology,” he emphasizes — and one that relies heavily on mathematical thinking. He was particularly influenced by a sentence from his early professional career: “My cryptography teacher and first real boss once said with regard to digitalization: cryptography is not everything — but without cryptography, everything is nothing. What could be better for a mathematician?”

Holistic perspective on cyber security

Schabhüser learned early on that this technology is not a theory without consequences. In his very first year at the BSI, he and a colleague managed to break a public key cryptosystem that was actually considered secure — a moment that still shapes him today and illustrates how important critical thinking and attack perspectives are in IT security.

Accordingly, the mathematician emphasizes the importance of holistic security strategies — both for IT specialists and for organizations as a whole. Today, cyber security must be seen as an integral part of risk management. He advises IT specialists to implement “security by design” and to anchor information security as a quality criterion in products and services.

Schabhüser formulates modest but clear expectations for his time at the Institute of Computer Science: a good course, motivated students — and perhaps also new impulses from the exchange with colleagues and participants. His central message to the students is concise and to the point: “Design information technology — but with common sense.”

Dr. Gerhard Schabhüser studied mathematics at the University of Münster and completed his doctorate in cooperation with the FernUniversität in Hagen. From 1991 to March 2025, he worked at the German Federal Office for Information Security (BSI). Initially, his work focused on the development and evaluation of cryptographic procedures. He then headed the “Cryptography and Scientific Foundations” department and from 2005 was Head of Department for Cryptography, Scientific Coordination and Technical Classified Information Security. From 2017 to March 2025, he was Vice President of the BSI.

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