Need absolute privacy on your cell phone calls? Try the Cryptophone. The Cryptophone is a joint venture between Taiwanese smartphone maker HTC, and GSMK of Germany. The Cryptophone is a pretty normal clamshell phone with special software that encrypts your calls with "special software that encrypts calls with 4096 bit Diffie-Hellman key exchange and SHA256 hash function AES 256 and Twofish between Cryptophones." . The Cryptophone G10i pictured here is very similar to the HTC Star Trek. It is a quad-band GSM/GPRS phone with a 1.3 megapixel camera. Security doesn't come cheap as this phone sells for $2080. If you want security in a PDA phone you can check out the Cryptophone 220 but be prepared to shell out even more money. The link for this article located at pdaBlast! is no longer available. . Protect your conversations using the SecureCom X20, equipped with state-of-the-art encryption methods for ultimate confidentiality.. Cryptophone, Call Encryption, Secure Smartphone, GSMK Technology, Privacy Solutions. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
Long hailed as the future of electronic security, quantum cryptography has arrived. As Swiss company id Quantique introduces a commercial quantum cryptography system and an American company, MagiQ Technologies, plans to unveil a second, at least one of the field's leading . . . . Long hailed as the future of electronic security, quantum cryptography has arrived. As Swiss company id Quantique introduces a commercial quantum cryptography system and an American company, MagiQ Technologies, plans to unveil a second, at least one of the field's leading researchers believes the technology is already being used to send data in the nation's capital. Quantum cryptography is the ultimate in ciphers. Drawing on the seemingly magical principles of quantum mechanics--the physics associated with very small particles--it allows two people to exchange encryption keys over a public network, use those keys to encode their correspondence, and know that the correspondence is completely secure. In theory, if you encode an e-mail message, a telephone call, or a financial transaction using quantum techniques, the content will be hidden from the eyes of interlopers not only for the moment, but for eternity. Chris Fuchs, a Bell Labs scientist who's been at the forefront of quantum research for the past decade, is convinced the government has already put this impenetrable padlock on much of the top-secret correspondence it sends across Washington. The link for this article located at pcmag is no longer available. . Long hailed as the future of electronic security, quantum cryptography has arrived. As Swiss company. hailed, future, electronic, security, quantum, cryptography, arrived, swiss, company. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
The U.S. government likes that number. Earlier this month, it selected Rijmen and Daemen's brainchild as the new Advanced Encryption Standard. That means Rijndael will soon become the shield of choice to protect sensitive U.S. government information, financial transactions and Internet . . . . The U.S. government likes that number. Earlier this month, it selected Rijmen and Daemen's brainchild as the new Advanced Encryption Standard. That means Rijndael will soon become the shield of choice to protect sensitive U.S. government information, financial transactions and Internet traffic. AES will replace Data Encryption Standard, or DES, invented by IBM Corp. (NYSE: IBM) in the 1970s, which has become vulnerable to breaches from powerful supercomputers. The link for this article located at ZDNet is no longer available. . The U.S. authorities select Serpent as the Secure Cryptographic Algorithm to bolster data confidentiality and integrity.. Rijndael,AES,encryption,government,data security. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
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