GCHQ director Iain Lobban has said there were “enduring lessons” to be drawn from the work of Alan Turing.
Based at Bletchley Park, the mathematician was part of the team that cracked the Nazi Enigma code – a vital part of the allied war effort.
He is now widely recognised as a computing pioneer.
However, at the time of the death – which an inquest recorded as suicide – he was virtually unknown to the public. His work at Bletchley was kept secret until 1974.
Mr Lobban said at an event in Leeds that Turing had a played a key part in the “irrevocable change” that eventually led to the development of the “highly technological intelligence organisation that GCHQ is today”.
Describing Turing as one of the “great minds of the twentieth century” he said that staff at the organisation had demanded that he make “a big public deal” of Turing’s legacy as part of celebrations marking the centenary of the codebreaker’s birth.
However, Mr Lobban said he didn’t want anyone to think GCHQ was “trying to claim that Turing is ours and nobody else’s”.
The codebreaking work at Bletchley marked a shift – Mr Lobban argued – to a mindset that “started to see technology as something that could be pitted against technology”.
He said the consensus among his staff was that today Turing would be employed in “Cyber”.
“Then, the challenge was to secure allied codes and ciphers” he said. “Today, securing cyberspace… requires the collaboration of experts as diverse both personally and intellectually as any we saw at Bletchley Park.”
Mr Lobban also praised the technological achievements of Turing’s colleagues – including Tommy Flowers, a post office engineer who designed and constructed the Colossus codebreaking digital computer.
Mr Lobban said technology “lies at the very heart of our mission. Engineers and technologists are an essential part of our success.”