Jan Křen

Jan Křen (22 August 1930 – 7 April 2020) was a Czech historian, academic, dissident during Czechoslovakia's communist era, and a Charter 77 signatory. He specialized in the study of Czech-German relations.[1][2][3]

Jan Křen
Jan Křen in 2014
Born(1930-08-22)22 August 1930
Died7 April 2020(2020-04-07) (aged 89)
OccupationHistorian

Biography

During the 1960s, Jan Křen became one of the first Czechoslovak historians to document and research the expulsion of the Sudeten Germans from the country at the end of World War II.[2] Křen was originally a member of the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia from 1949 to 1969, but was expelled in 1970 over his opposition to the Warsaw Pact invasion.[1][2] He was also fired from his job as a professor and was forced to work as a manual laborer.[2]

He became involved with the pro-democracy dissident movement. He was one of the founding signatories of Charter 77 and began holding a series of underground seminars held covertly in apartments and universities.[1][2]

Křen was also a co-founder of the Samizdat historical studies journal.[2] In the 1980s, he published one of his best known books, "Conflicting Communities. Czechs and Germans 1780–1918", through his own Sixty-Eight Publishers, an illegal, underground publisher. The book was later published in Germany.[2]

In 1989, Křen founded the Institute of International Studies at Charles University and served as its first director.[2] [4] He also co-founded and chaired the Czech-German Commission of Historians and was involved with the Czech-German Fund of the Future.[2] Křen was a visiting professor at German universities in Berlin, Bremen and Marburg.[2]

The President of Germany awarded Jan Křen the Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany in 2000.[2] In 2002, Czech Republic President Vaclav Havel, a fellow Charter 77 signatory, awarded Křen the Medal of Merit.[1] He also won the 2006 Magnesia Litera book award for best educational book for "Two Centuries of Central Europe."[2]

Křen is believed to have contracted COVID-19 at the nursing home where he lived in the Michle district of Prague in March 2020.[1] He died from the illness on 7 April 2020, at the age of 89 during the COVID-19 pandemic in the Czech Republic.[1][2][3]

Awards

gollark: As if that's possible.
gollark: Fearsome.
gollark: I might have to release apioforms from the beecloud.
gollark: It must comfort you to think so.
gollark: > There is burgeoning interest in designing AI-basedsystems to assist humans in designing computing systems,including tools that automatically generate computer code.The most notable of these comes in the form of the first self-described ‘AI pair programmer’, GitHub Copilot, a languagemodel trained over open-source GitHub code. However, codeoften contains bugs—and so, given the vast quantity of unvettedcode that Copilot has processed, it is certain that the languagemodel will have learned from exploitable, buggy code. Thisraises concerns on the security of Copilot’s code contributions.In this work, we systematically investigate the prevalence andconditions that can cause GitHub Copilot to recommend insecurecode. To perform this analysis we prompt Copilot to generatecode in scenarios relevant to high-risk CWEs (e.g. those fromMITRE’s “Top 25” list). We explore Copilot’s performance onthree distinct code generation axes—examining how it performsgiven diversity of weaknesses, diversity of prompts, and diversityof domains. In total, we produce 89 different scenarios forCopilot to complete, producing 1,692 programs. Of these, wefound approximately 40 % to be vulnerable.Index Terms—Cybersecurity, AI, code generation, CWE

References

  1. Willoughby, Ian (2020-04-08). "Historian Jan Křen dies at 89 after contracting coronavirus". Radio Prague. Archived from the original on 2020-04-09. Retrieved 2020-04-10.
  2. "Zemřel historik Jan Křen. S nemocí covid-19 se léčil v Nemocnici Na Bulovce". iROZHLAS (in Czech). 2020-04-07. Archived from the original on 2020-04-07. Retrieved 2020-04-10.
  3. "Zemřel historik Jan Křen, zaměřoval se na česko-německé vztahy". Denik (in Czech). 2020-04-07. Archived from the original on 2020-04-09. Retrieved 2020-04-10.
  4. "Professor Jan Křen, founder of the Institute of International Studies, died". Faculty of Social Services at Charles University. 2020-04-07. Archived from the original on 2020-04-09. Retrieved 2020-04-10.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.