Formal verification makes RSA faster — and faster to deploy

Optimizations for Amazon's Graviton2 chip boost efficiency, and formal verification shortens development time.

Most secure transactions online are protected by public-key encryption schemes like RSA, whose security depends on the difficulty of factoring large numbers. Public-key encryption improves security because it enables the encrypted exchange of private keys. But because it depends on operations like modular exponentiation of large integers, it introduces significant computational overhead.

Researchers and engineers have introduced all kinds of optimizations to make public-key encryption more efficient, but the resulting complexity makes it difficult to verify that the encryption algorithms are behaving properly. And a bug in an encryption algorithm can be disastrous.

This post explains how Amazon’s Automated Reasoning group improved the throughput of RSA signatures on Amazon’s Graviton2 chip by 33% to 94%, depending on the key size, while also proving the functional correctness of our optimizations using formal verification.

Graviton chip.png
An AWS Graviton chip.

Graviton2 is a server-class CPU developed by Amazon Annapurna Labs, based on Arm Neoverse N1 cores. To improve the throughput of RSA signatures on Graviton2, we combined various techniques for fast modular arithmetic with assembly-level optimizations specific to Graviton2. To show that the optimized code is functionally correct, we formally verified it using the HOL Light interactive theorem prover, which was developed by a member of our team (John Harrison).

Our code is written in a constant-time style (for example, no secret-dependent branches or memory access patterns) to avoid side-channel attacks, which can learn secret information from operational statistics like function execution time. The optimized functions and their proofs are included in Amazon Web Services’ s2n-bignum library of formally verified big-number operations. The functions are also adopted by AWS-LC, the cryptographic library maintained by AWS, and by its bindings Amazon Corretto Crypto Provider (ACCP) and AWS Libcrypto for Rust (AWS-LC-RS).

Key size (bits)

Baseline throughput (ops/sec)

Improved throughput (ops/sec)

Speedup (%)

2048

299

541

81.00%

3072

95

127

33.50%

4096

42

81

94.20%

Improvements in the throughput times of RSA signatures in AWS-LC on Graviton2. 

Step 1. Making RSA fast on Graviton2

Optimizing the execution of RSA algorithms on Graviton2 requires the careful placement and use of multiplication instructions. On 64-bit Arm CPUs, the multiplication of two 64-bit numbers, with a product of up to 128 bits (conventionally designated 64×64→128), are accomplished by two instructions: MUL, producing the lower 64 bits, and UMULH, producing the upper 64 bits. On Graviton2, MUL has a latency of four cycles and stalls the multiplier pipeline for two cycles after issue, while UMULH has a latency of five cycles and stalls the multiplier pipeline for three cycles after issue. Since Neoverse N1 has a single multiplier pipeline but three addition pipelines, multiplication throughput is around one-tenth the throughput of 64-bit addition.

To improve throughput, we (1) applied a different multiplication algorithm, trading multiplication for addition instructions, and (2) used single-instruction/multiple-data (SIMD) instructions to offload a portion of multiplication work to the vector units of the CPU.

Algorithmic optimization

For fast and secure modular arithmetic, Montgomery modular multiplication is a widely used technique. Montgomery multiplication represents numbers in a special form called Montgomery form, and when a sequence of modular operations needs to be executed — as is the case with the RSA algorithm — keeping intermediary products in Montgomery form makes computation more efficient.

We implement Montgomery multiplication as the combination of big-integer multiplication and a separate Montgomery reduction, which is one of its two standard implementations.

Related content
Solution method uses new infrastructure that reduces proof-checking overhead by more than 90%.

On Graviton2, the benefit of this approach is that we can use the well-known Karatsuba algorithm to trade costly multiplications for addition operations. The Karatsuba algorithm decomposes a multiplication into three smaller multiplications, together with some register shifts. It can be performed recursively, and for large numbers, it’s more efficient than the standard multiplication algorithm.

We used Karatsuba’s algorithm for power-of-two bit sizes, such as 2,048 bits and 4,096 bits. For other sizes (e.g., 3072 bits), we still use a quadratic multiplication. The Karatsuba multiplication can be further optimized when the two operands are equal, and we wrote functions specialized for squaring as well.

With these optimizations we achieved a 31–49% speedup in 2,048- and 4,096-bit RSA signatures compared with our original code.

Microarchitectural optimization

Many Arm CPUs implement the Neon single-instruction/multiple-data (SIMD) architecture extension. It adds a file of 128-bit registers, which are viewed as vectors of various sizes (8/16/32/64 bit), and SIMD instructions that can operate on some or all of those vectors in parallel. Furthermore, SIMD instructions use different pipelines than scalar instructions, so both types of instructions can be executed in parallel.

Vectorization strategy. Vectorization is a process that replaces sequential executions of the same operation with a single operation over multiple values; it usually increases efficiency. Using SIMD instructions, we vectorized scalar 64-bit multiplications.

For big-integer multiplication, vectorized 64-bit multiply-low code nicely overlapped with scalar 64-bit multiply-high instructions (UMULH). For squaring, vectorizing two 64×64→128-bit squaring operations worked well. For multiplications occurring in Montgomery reduction, vectorizing 64×64→128-bit multiplications and 64×64→64 multiply-lows worked. To choose which scalar multiplications to vectorize, we wrote a script that enumerated differently vectorized codes and timed their execution. For short code fragments, exhaustive enumeration was possible, but for larger code fragments, we had to rely on experience. The overall solution was chosen only after extensive experiments with other alternatives, such as those described by Seo et. al. at ICISC’14.

Related content
Using time to last byte — rather than time to first byte — to assess the effects of data-heavy TLS 1.3 on real-world connections yields more encouraging results.

Although the scalar and SIMD units are able to operate in parallel, it is sometimes necessary to move inputs and intermediate results between integer and SIMD registers, and this brings significant complications. The FMOV instruction copies data from a 64-bit scalar register to a SIMD register, but it uses the same pipeline as the scalar multiplier, so its use would reduce scalar-multiplier throughput.

The alternative of loading into a vector register first and then using MOV to copy it to a scalar register has lower latency, but it occupies the SIMD pipeline and hence lowers the throughput of SIMD arithmetic operations. Somewhat counterintuitively, the best solution was to make two separate memory loads into the integer and SIMD registers, with care for their relative placement. We did still use MOV instructions to copy certain SIMD results into integer registers when the SIMD results were already placed at SIMD registers because it was faster than a round trip via store-load instructions.

Fast constant-time table lookup code. Another independent improvement was the reimplementation of a vectorized constant-time lookup table for a fast modular-exponentiation algorithm. Combining this with our earlier optimization further raises our speedup to 80–94% when compared to the throughput of 2,048-/4,096-bit RSA signatures from our initial code, as well as a 33% speedup for 3,072-bit signatures.

Instruction scheduling. Even though Graviton2 is an out-of-order CPU, carefully scheduling instructions is important for performance, due to the finite capacity of components like reorder buffers and issue queues. The implementations discussed here were obtained by manual instruction scheduling, which led to good results but was time consuming.

We also investigated automating the process using the SLOTHY superoptimizer, which is based on constraint solving and a (simplified) microarchitecture model. With additional tweaks to Montgomery reduction to precalculate some numbers used in Karatsuba, SLOTHY optimization enabled a 95–120% improvement on 2,048-/4,096-bit throughputs and 46% on 3,072-bit! However, this method is not yet incorporated into AWS-LC since verifying the automated scheduling proved to be challenging. Studying the potential for automatically proving correctness of scheduling optimizations is a work in progress.

Step 2. Formally verifying the code

To deploy the optimized code in production we need to ensure that it works correctly. Random testing is a cheap approach for quickly checking simple and known cases, but to deliver a higher level of assurance, we rely on formal verification. In this section we explain how we apply formal verification to prove functional correctness of cryptographic primitives.

Introduction to s2n-bignum

AWS’s s2n-bignum is both (1) a framework for formally verifying assembly code in x86-64 and Arm and (2) a collection of fast assembly functions for cryptography, verified using the framework itself.

Related content
New IAM Access Analyzer feature uses automated reasoning to ensure that access policies written in the IAM policy language don’t grant unintended access.

Specification in s2n-bignum. Every assembly function in s2n-bignum — including the new assembly functions used in RSA — has a specification stating its functional correctness. A specification states that for any program state satisfying some precondition, the output state of the program must satisfy some postcondition. For example, bignum_mul_4_8(uint64_t *z, uint64_t *x, uint64_t *y) is intended to multiply two 256-bit (four-word) numbers producing a 512-bit (eight-word) result. Its (abbreviated) precondition over an input state s is

  aligned_bytes_loaded s (word pc) bignum_mul_4_8_mc
∧ read PC s = word pc
∧ C_ARGUMENTS [z, x, y] s
∧ bignum_from_memory (x,4) s = a
∧ bignum_from_memory (y,4) s = b

This means that the machine code of bignum_mul_4_8 is loaded at the address currently contained in the program counter PC (aligned_bytes_loaded), symbolic values are assigned to the function arguments according to C’s application binary interface (C_ARGUMENTS ...), and big integers logically represented by the symbols a and b are stored in the memory location pointed to by x and y for four words (bignum_from_memory ...).

The (abbreviated) postcondition over an output state s is

bignum_from_memory (z,8) s = a * b

This means that the multiplied result a * b is stored in the eight-word buffer starting at location z.

One more component is a relation between the input and output states that must be satisfied:

(MAYCHANGE_REGS_AND_FLAGS_PERMITTED_BY_ABI;
MAYCHANGE [memory :> bytes(z,8 * 8)]) (s_in,s_out)

This means that executing the code may change registers/flags permitted by the application binary interface (ABI) and the eight-word buffer starting at z, but all other state components must remain unchanged.

Verifying assembly using HOL Light. To prove that the implementation is correct with respect to the specification, we use the HOL Light interactive theorem prover. In contrast to “black-box” automated theorem provers, tools like HOL Light emphasize a balance between automating routine proof steps and allowing explicit, and programmable, user guidance. When a proof exists on paper or inside someone’s head, a proficient user can effectively rewrite the proof in an interactive theorem prover. S2n-bignum uses a combination of two strategies to verify a program:

Related content
Both secure multiparty computation and differential privacy protect the privacy of data used in computation, but each has advantages in different contexts.

Symbolic execution. Given a representation of the input program state using symbolic variables in place of specific values, symbolic execution infers a symbolic output state at the end of some code snippet, in effect doing a more rigorous and generalized form of program execution. While this still leaves the postcondition to be proved, it strips away artifacts of program execution and leaves a purely mathematical problem.

Intermediate annotations in the style of Floyd-Hoare logic. Each intermediate assertion serves as a postcondition for the preceding code and a precondition for the subsequent code. The assertion need contain only the details that are necessary to prove its corresponding postcondition. This abstraction helps make symbolic simulation more tractable, in terms of both automated-reasoning capacity and the ease with which humans can understand the result.

We assume that the Arm hardware behaves in conformance with the model of s2n-bignum, but the model was developed with care, and it was validated by extensively cross-checking its interpretations against hardware.

Future formal-verification improvements. The formal verification for s2n-bignum does not yet cover nonfunctional properties of the implementation, including whether it may leak information through side channels such as the running time of the code. Rather, we handle this through a disciplined general style of implementation: never using instructions having variable timing, such as division, and no conditional branching/memory access patterns that depend on secret data. Also, we sanity-check some of these properties using simple static checks, and we execute the code on inputs with widely differing bit densities to analyze the corresponding run times and investigate any unexpected correlations.

These disciplines and sanity checks are standard practice with us, and we apply them to all the new implementations described here. In ongoing work, we are exploring the possibility of formally verifying the absence of information leakage.

Research areas

Related content

IN, HR, Gurugram
Our customers have immense faith in our ability to deliver packages timely and as expected. A well planned network seamlessly scales to handle millions of package movements a day. It has monitoring mechanisms that detect failures before they even happen (such as predicting network congestion, operations breakdown), and perform proactive corrective actions. When failures do happen, it has inbuilt redundancies to mitigate impact (such as determine other routes or service providers that can handle the extra load), and avoids relying on single points of failure (service provider, node, or arc). Finally, it is cost optimal, so that customers can be passed the benefit from an efficiently set up network. Amazon Shipping is hiring Applied Scientists to help improve our ability to plan and execute package movements. As an Applied Scientist in Amazon Shipping, you will work on multiple challenging machine learning problems spread across a wide spectrum of business problems. You will build ML models to help our transportation cost auditing platforms effectively audit off-manifest (discrepancies between planned and actual shipping cost). You will build models to improve the quality of financial and planning data by accurately predicting ship cost at a package level. Your models will help forecast the packages required to be pick from shipper warehouses to reduce First Mile shipping cost. Using signals from within the transportation network (such as network load, and velocity of movements derived from package scan events) and outside (such as weather signals), you will build models that predict delivery delay for every package. These models will help improve buyer experience by triggering early corrective actions, and generating proactive customer notifications. Your role will require you to demonstrate Think Big and Invent and Simplify, by refining and translating Transportation domain-related business problems into one or more Machine Learning problems. You will use techniques from a wide array of machine learning paradigms, such as supervised, unsupervised, semi-supervised and reinforcement learning. Your model choices will include, but not be limited to, linear/logistic models, tree based models, deep learning models, ensemble models, and Q-learning models. You will use techniques such as LIME and SHAP to make your models interpretable for your customers. You will employ a family of reusable modelling solutions to ensure that your ML solution scales across multiple regions (such as North America, Europe, Asia) and package movement types (such as small parcel movements and truck movements). You will partner with Applied Scientists and Research Scientists from other teams in US and India working on related business domains. Your models are expected to be of production quality, and will be directly used in production services. You will work as part of a diverse data science and engineering team comprising of other Applied Scientists, Software Development Engineers and Business Intelligence Engineers. You will participate in the Amazon ML community by authoring scientific papers and submitting them to Machine Learning conferences. You will mentor Applied Scientists and Software Development Engineers having a strong interest in ML. You will also be called upon to provide ML consultation outside your team for other problem statements. If you are excited by this charter, come join us!
US, WA, Seattle
Do you want to re-invent how millions of people consume video content on their TVs, Tablets and Alexa? We are building a free to watch streaming service called Fire TV Channels (https://techcrunch.com/2023/08/21/amazon-launches-fire-tv-channels-app-400-fast-channels/). Our goal is to provide customers with a delightful and personalized experience for consuming content across News, Sports, Cooking, Gaming, Entertainment, Lifestyle and more. You will work closely with engineering and product stakeholders to realize our ambitious product vision. You will get to work with Generative AI and other state of the art technologies to help build personalization and recommendation solutions from the ground up. You will be in the driver's seat to present customers with content they will love. Using Amazon’s large-scale computing resources, you will ask research questions about customer behavior, build state-of-the-art models to generate recommendations and run these models to enhance the customer experience. You will participate in the Amazon ML community and mentor Applied Scientists and Software Engineers with a strong interest in and knowledge of ML. Your work will directly benefit customers and you will measure the impact using scientific tools.
US, MA, Boston
The Artificial General Intelligence (AGI) team is looking for a passionate, talented, and inventive Senior Applied Scientist with a strong deep learning background, to build industry-leading technology with Large Language Models (LLMs) and multimodal systems. Key job responsibilities As a Senior Applied Scientist with the AGI team, you will work with talented peers to lead the development of novel algorithms and modeling techniques, to advance the state of the art with LLMs. Your work will directly impact our customers in the form of products and services that make use of speech and language technology. You will leverage Amazon’s heterogeneous data sources and large-scale computing resources to accelerate advances in generative artificial intelligence (GenAI). About the team The AGI team has a mission to push the envelope in LLMs and multimodal systems, in order to provide the best-possible experience for our customers.
IN, KA, Bengaluru
The Amazon Alexa AI team in India is seeking a talented, self-driven Applied Scientist to work on prototyping, optimizing, and deploying ML algorithms within the realm of Generative AI. Key responsibilities include: - Research, experiment and build Proof Of Concepts advancing the state of the art in AI & ML for GenAI. - Collaborate with cross-functional teams to architect and execute technically rigorous AI projects. - Thrive in dynamic environments, adapting quickly to evolving technical requirements and deadlines. - Engage in effective technical communication (written & spoken) with coordination across teams. - Conduct thorough documentation of algorithms, methodologies, and findings for transparency and reproducibility. - Publish research papers in internal and external venues of repute - Support on-call activities for critical issues Basic Qualifications: - Master’s or PhD in computer science, statistics or a related field - 2-7 years experience in deep learning, machine learning, and data science. - Proficiency in coding and software development, with a strong focus on machine learning frameworks. - Experience in Python, or another language; command line usage; familiarity with Linux and AWS ecosystems. - Understanding of relevant statistical measures such as confidence intervals, significance of error measurements, development and evaluation data sets, etc. - Excellent communication skills (written & spoken) and ability to collaborate effectively in a distributed, cross-functional team setting. - Papers published in AI/ML venues of repute Preferred Qualifications: - Track record of diving into data to discover hidden patterns and conducting error/deviation analysis - Ability to develop experimental and analytic plans for data modeling processes, use of strong baselines, ability to accurately determine cause and effect relations - The motivation to achieve results in a fast-paced environment. - Exceptional level of organization and strong attention to detail - Comfortable working in a fast paced, highly collaborative, dynamic work environment
US, WA, Seattle
Have you ever wondered how Amazon launches and maintains a consistent customer experience across hundreds of countries and languages it serves its customers? Are you passionate about data and mathematics, and hope to impact the experience of millions of customers? Are you obsessed with designing simple algorithmic solutions to very challenging problems? If so, we look forward to hearing from you! At Amazon, we strive to be Earth's most customer-centric company, where both internal and external customers can find and discover anything they want in their own language of preference. Our Translations Services (TS) team plays a pivotal role in expanding the reach of our marketplace worldwide and enables thousands of developers and other stakeholders (Product Managers, Program Managers, Linguists) in developing locale specific solutions. Amazon Translations Services (TS) is seeking an Applied Scientist to be based in our Seattle office. As a key member of the Science and Engineering team of TS, this person will be responsible for designing algorithmic solutions based on data and mathematics for translating billions of words annually across 130+ and expanding set of locales. The successful applicant will ensure that there is minimal human touch involved in any language translation and accurate translated text is available to our worldwide customers in a streamlined and optimized manner. With access to vast amounts of data, cutting-edge technology, and a diverse community of talented individuals, you will have the opportunity to make a meaningful impact on the way customers and stakeholders engage with Amazon and our platform worldwide. Together, we will drive innovation, solve complex problems, and shape the future of e-commerce. Key job responsibilities * Apply your expertise in LLM models to design, develop, and implement scalable machine learning solutions that address complex language translation-related challenges in the eCommerce space. * Collaborate with cross-functional teams, including software engineers, data scientists, and product managers, to define project requirements, establish success metrics, and deliver high-quality solutions. * Conduct thorough data analysis to gain insights, identify patterns, and drive actionable recommendations that enhance seller performance and customer experiences across various international marketplaces. * Continuously explore and evaluate state-of-the-art modeling techniques and methodologies to improve the accuracy and efficiency of language translation-related systems. * Communicate complex technical concepts effectively to both technical and non-technical stakeholders, providing clear explanations and guidance on proposed solutions and their potential impact. About the team We are a start-up mindset team. As the long-term technical strategy is still taking shape, there is a lot of opportunity for this fresh Science team to innovate by leveraging Gen AI technoligies to build scalable solutions from scratch. Our Vision: Language will not stand in the way of anyone on earth using Amazon products and services. Our Mission: We are the enablers and guardians of translation for Amazon's customers. We do this by offering hands-off-the-wheel service to all Amazon teams, optimizing translation quality and speed at the lowest cost possible.
GB, London
Are you looking to work at the forefront of Machine Learning and AI? Would you be excited to apply cutting edge Generative AI algorithms to solve real world problems with significant impact? The AWS Industries Team at AWS helps AWS customers implement Generative AI solutions and realize transformational business opportunities for AWS customers in the most strategic industry verticals. This is a team of data scientists, engineers, and architects working step-by-step with customers to build bespoke solutions that harness the power of generative AI. The team helps customers imagine and scope the use cases that will create the greatest value for their businesses, select and train and fine tune the right models, define paths to navigate technical or business challenges, develop proof-of-concepts, and build applications to launch these solutions at scale. The AWS Industries team provides guidance and implements best practices for applying generative AI responsibly and cost efficiently. You will work directly with customers and innovate in a fast-paced organization that contributes to game-changing projects and technologies. You will design and run experiments, research new algorithms, and find new ways of optimizing risk, profitability, and customer experience. In this Data Scientist role you will be capable of using GenAI and other techniques to design, evangelize, and implement and scale cutting-edge solutions for never-before-solved problems. Key job responsibilities - Collaborate with AI/ML scientists, engineers, and architects to research, design, develop, and evaluate cutting-edge generative AI algorithms and build ML systems to address real-world challenges - Interact with customers directly to understand the business problem, help and aid them in implementation of generative AI solutions, deliver briefing and deep dive sessions to customers and guide customer on adoption patterns and paths to production - Create and deliver best practice recommendations, tutorials, blog posts, publications, sample code, and presentations adapted to technical, business, and executive stakeholder - Provide customer and market feedback to Product and Engineering teams to help define product direction About the team Diverse Experiences Amazon values diverse experiences. Even if you do not meet all of the preferred qualifications and skills listed in the job description, we encourage candidates to apply. If your career is just starting, hasn’t followed a traditional path, or includes alternative experiences, don’t let it stop you from applying. Why AWS Amazon Web Services (AWS) is the world’s most comprehensive and broadly adopted cloud platform. We pioneered cloud computing and never stopped innovating — that’s why customers from the most successful startups to Global 500 companies trust our robust suite of products and services to power their businesses. Work/Life Balance We value work-life harmony. Achieving success at work should never come at the expense of sacrifices at home, which is why we strive for flexibility as part of our working culture. When we feel supported in the workplace and at home, there’s nothing we can’t achieve in the cloud. Inclusive Team Culture Here at AWS, it’s in our nature to learn and be curious. Our employee-led affinity groups foster a culture of inclusion that empower us to be proud of our differences. Ongoing events and learning experiences, including our Conversations on Race and Ethnicity (CORE) and AmazeCon (gender diversity) conferences, inspire us to never stop embracing our uniqueness. Mentorship and Career Growth We’re continuously raising our performance bar as we strive to become Earth’s Best Employer. That’s why you’ll find endless knowledge-sharing, mentorship and other career-advancing resources here to help you develop into a better-rounded professional.
US, CA, Palo Alto
Amazon Sponsored Products is investing heavily in building a world class advertising business and we are responsible for defining and delivering a collection of GenAI/LLM powered self-service performance advertising products that drive discovery and sales. Our products are strategically important to Amazon’s Selling Partners and key to driving their long-term growth. We deliver billions of ad impressions and clicks daily and are breaking fresh ground to create world-class products. We are highly motivated, collaborative and fun-loving team with an entrepreneurial spirit and bias for action. With a broad mandate to experiment and innovate, we are growing at an unprecedented rate with a seemingly endless range of new opportunities. This role will be pivotal within the Autonomous Campaigns org of Sponsored Products Ads, where we're pioneering the development of AI-powered advertising innovations that will redefine the future of campaign management and optimization. As a Principal Applied Scientist, you will lead the charge in creating the next generation of self-operating, GenAI-driven advertising systems that will set a new standard for the industry. Our team is at the forefront of designing and implementing these transformative technologies, which will leverage advanced Large Language Models (LLMs) and sophisticated chain-of-thought reasoning to achieve true advertising autonomy. Your work will bring to life systems capable of deeply understanding the nuanced context of each product, market trends, and consumer behavior, making intelligent, real-time decisions that surpass human capabilities. By harnessing the power of these future-state GenAI systems, we will develop advertising solutions capable of autonomously selecting optimal keywords, dynamically adjusting bids based on complex market conditions, and optimizing product targeting across various Amazon platforms. Crucially, these systems will continuously analyze performance metrics and implement strategic pivots, all without requiring manual intervention from advertisers, allowing them to focus on their core business while our AI works tirelessly on their behalf. This is not simply about automating existing processes; your work will redefine what's possible in advertising. Our GenAI systems will employ multi-step reasoning, considering a vast array of factors, from seasonality and competitive landscape to macroeconomic trends, to make decisions that far exceed human speed and effectiveness. This autonomous, context-aware approach represents a paradigm shift in how advertising campaigns are conceived, executed, and optimized. As a Principal Applied Scientist, you will be at the forefront of this transformation, tackling complex challenges in natural language processing, reinforcement learning, and causal inference. Your pioneering efforts will directly shape the future of e-commerce advertising, with the potential to influence marketplace dynamics on a global scale. This is an unparalleled opportunity to push the boundaries of what's achievable in AI-driven advertising and leave an indelible mark on the industry. Key job responsibilities • Seek to understand in depth the Sponsored Products offering at Amazon and identify areas of opportunities to grow our business using GenAI, LLM, and ML solutions. • Mentor and guide the applied scientists in our organization and hold us to a high standard of technical rigor and excellence in AI/ML. • Design and lead organization-wide AI/ML roadmaps to help our Amazon shoppers have a delightful shopping experience while creating long term value for our advertisers. • Work with our engineering partners and draw upon your experience to meet latency and other system constraints. • Identify untapped, high-risk technical and scientific directions, and devise new research directions that you will drive to completion and deliver. • Be responsible for communicating our Generative AI/ Traditional AI/ML innovations to the broader internal & external scientific community.
US, CO, Boulder
Do you want to lead the Ads industry and redefine how we measure the effectiveness of the WW Amazon Ads business? Are you passionate about causal inference, Deep Learning/DNN, raising the science bar, and connecting leading-edge science research to Amazon-scale implementation? If so, come join Amazon Ads to be an Applied Science leader within our Advertising Incrementality Measurement science team! Key job responsibilities As an Applied Science leader within the Advertising Incrementality Measurement (AIM) science team, you are responsible for defining and executing on key workstreams within our overall causal measurement science vision. In particular, you will lead the science development of our Deep Neural Net (DNN) ML model, a foundational ML model to understand the impact of individual ad touchpoints for billions of daily ad touchpoints. You will work on a team of Applied Scientists, Economists, and Data Scientists to work backwards from customer needs and translate product ideas into concrete science deliverables. You will be a thought leader for inventing scalable causal measurement solutions that support highly accurate and actionable causal insights--from defining and executing hundreds of thousands of RCTs, to developing an exciting science R&D agenda. You will solve hard problems, advance science at Amazon, and be a leading innovator in the causal measurement of advertising effectiveness. In this role, you will work with a team of applied scientists, economists, engineers, product managers, and UX designers to define and build the future of advertising causal measurement. You will be working with massive data, a dedicated engineering team, and industry-leading partner scientists. Your team’s work will help shape the future of Amazon Advertising.
US, WA, Seattle
The Seller Fees organization drives the monetization infrastructure powering Amazon's global marketplace, processing billions of transactions for over two million active third-party sellers worldwide. Our team owns the complete technical stack and strategic vision for fee computation systems, leveraging advanced machine learning to optimize seller experiences and maintain fee integrity at unprecedented scale. We're seeking an exceptional Applied Scientist to push the boundaries of large-scale ML systems in a business-critical domain. This role presents unique opportunities to • Architect and deploy state-of-the-art transformer-based models for fee classification and anomaly detection across hundreds of millions of products • Pioneer novel applications of multimodal LLMs to analyze product attributes, images, and seller metadata for intelligent fee determination • Build production-scale generative AI systems for fee integrity and seller communications • Advance the field of ML through novel research in high-stakes, large-scale transaction processing • Develop SOTA causal inference frameworks integrated with deep learning to understand fee impacts and optimize seller outcomes • Collaborate with world-class scientists and engineers to solve complex problems at the intersection of deep learning, economics, and large business systems. If you're passionate about advancing the state-of-the-art in applied ML/AI while tackling challenging problems at global scale, we want you on our team! Key job responsibilities Responsibilities: . Design measurable and scalable science solutions that can be adopted across stores worldwide with different languages, policy and requirements. · Integrate AI (both generative and symbolic) into compound agentic workflows to transform complex business systems into intelligent ones for both internal and external customers. · Develop large scale classification and prediction models using the rich features of text, image and customer interactions and state-of-the-art techniques. · Research and implement novel machine learning, statistical and econometrics approaches. · Write high quality code and implement scalable models within the production systems. · Stay up to date with relevant scientific publications. · Collaborate with business and software teams both within and outside of the fees organization.
US, WA, Seattle
The Selling Partner Experience (SPX) organization strives to make Amazon the best place for Selling Partners to do business. The SPX Science team is building an AI-powered conversational assistant to transform the Selling Partner experience. The Selling Assistant is a trusted partner and a seasoned advisor that’s always available to enable our partners to thrive in Amazon’s stores. It takes away the cognitive load of selling on Amazon by providing a single interface to handle a diverse set of selling needs. The assistant always stays by the seller's side, talks to them in their language, enables them to capitalize on opportunities, and helps them accomplish their business goals with ease. It is powered by the state-of-the-art Generative AI, going beyond a typical chatbot to provide a personalized experience to sellers running real businesses, large and small. Do you want to join an innovative team of scientists, engineers, product and program managers who use the latest Generative AI and Machine Learning technologies to help Amazon create a delightful Selling Partner experience? Do you want to build solutions to real business problems by automatically understanding and addressing sellers’ challenges, needs and opportunities? Are you excited by the prospect of contributing to one of Amazon’s most strategic Generative AI initiatives? If yes, then you may be a great fit to join the Selling Partner Experience Science team. Key job responsibilities - Use state-of-the-art Machine Learning and Generative AI techniques to create the next generation of the tools that empower Amazon's Selling Partners to succeed. - Design, develop and deploy highly innovative models to interact with Sellers and delight them with solutions. - Work closely with teams of scientists and software engineers to drive real-time model implementations and deliver novel and highly impactful features. - Establish scalable, efficient, automated processes for large scale data analyses, model benchmarking, model validation and model implementation. - Research and implement novel machine learning and statistical approaches. - Participate in strategic initiatives to employ the most recent advances in ML in a fast-paced, experimental environment. About the team Selling Partner Experience Science is a growing team of scientists, engineers and product leaders engaged in the research and development of the next generation of ML-driven technology to empower Amazon's Selling Partners to succeed. We draw from many science domains, from Natural Language Processing to Computer Vision to Optimization to Economics, to create solutions that seamlessly and automatically engage with Sellers, solve their problems, and help them grow. We are focused on building seller facing AI-powered tools using the latest science advancements to empower sellers to drive the growth of their business. We strive to radically simplify the seller experience, lowering the cognitive burden of selling on Amazon by making it easy to accomplish critical tasks such as launching new products, understanding and complying with Amazon’s policies and taking actions to grow their business.