Results for the tag, key encryption.

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All ResultsResults from Computer Weekly - KEY ENCRYPTION

...bit keys could be broken in the foreseeable future. To protect the chip the Home Office uses public and private key encryption based on a 256-bit elliptic curve. Experts believe it takes longer to break codes encrypted using an elliptic curve... http://www.computerweekly.com/Articles/2009/08/07/237247/id-card-cannot-be-hacked-uk-government-claims-encryption-secrets.htm
...web sites to deliver malware or steal account numbers and log in details. He said the X509 standard for public key encryption, which governs SSL, contained ambiguities that meant browser makers could interpret a site's digital certificate... http://www.computerweekly.com/Articles/2009/07/30/237120/black-hat-ssl-is-fragile.htm
...and internet authorisation card, where transactions are digitally signed by the ICP-Brasil, the national public key encryption standards body. QHS5-20090106.1 http://www.computerweekly.com/Articles/2008/03/05/229721/newcastle-building-society-to-issue-smart-pre-payment.htm
Two and a half years ago, Nikk Gilbert, head of security architecture at a multinational transport and energy firm, had a dream that staff could swipe a smartca... http://www.computerweekly.com/Articles/2008/03/17/229882/smartcard-technology-reaps-security-benefits.htm
...processing trillions of characters a second. GCHQ, which moved to Cheltenham in 1952, also invented public-key encryption in 1973 - although it did not make the work of its employee James Ellis public, leaving others to make the same discovery... http://www.computerweekly.com/Articles/2007/11/16/228151/german-pips-bletchleys-colossus-in-cracking-battle.htm
...existing Wap security protocol using digital keys processed by the phone, but most phones cannot handle the digital key encryption and decryption required in a time acceptable to the user. Fortunately, with the recently approved Wap 2.0... http://www.computerweekly.com/Articles/2002/05/23/187318/wireless-networks-is-yours-secure.htm
...Encryption Standard (AES) and Triple Data Encryption Standard (3DES) encrypted algorithms and a minimum of 128-bit key encryption. Their co-ordinated approach means banks, credit-card companies and mortgage firms that supply data to them... http://www.computerweekly.com/Articles/2005/10/04/212139/credit-firms-co-operate-on-encryption.htm
...Similarly, hash algorithms produce fingerprint files.Digital watermarking can also be contrasted with public-key encryption, which also transforms original files into another form. It is a common practice nowadays to encrypt digital documents... http://www.computerweekly.com/Articles/1999/10/27/178985/white-paper-digital-watermarking.htm
...type of encryption - asymmetric or public key encryption - comes in. Public key encryption uses two keys: a private one and a public...algorithm today in its products. "Symmetric key encryption is always faster than asymmetric, so what... http://www.computerweekly.com/Articles/2005/04/26/209585/Encryption-the-key-to-secure-data.htm
...type of encryption - asymmetric or public key encryption - comes in. Public key encryption uses two keys: a private one and a public...algorithm today in its products. "Symmetric key encryption is always faster than asymmetric, so what... http://www.computerweekly.com/Articles/2005/04/28/209615/Encryption-the-key-to-secure-data.htm

All ResultsNews and blogs from the web - KEY ENCRYPTION

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By defining a protocol that can be used by any cryptographic client, ranging from a simple automated electric meter to very complex disk-arrays, KMIP enables enterprise key management servers to communicate via a single protocol to all cryptographic clients supporting that protocol. http://xml.coverpages.org/ni2009-02-27-a.html
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