A group made up of representatives of the U.S. government and leading technology companies has released new certification standards for security professionals, according to a statement by the Computing Technology Industry Association (CompTIA. . .. A group made up of representatives of the U.S. government and leading technology companies has released new certification standards for security professionals, according to a statement by the Computing Technology Industry Association (CompTIA ). The new certification, known as Security+, is intended to provide a standard method for training and evaluating the abilities of IT professionals. The organizations that participated in the Security+ committee included major software and hardware vendors such as Microsoft Corp., IBM and Sun Microsystems Inc., as well as leading security companies such as RSA Security Inc., Entrust Inc. and VeriSign Inc. The link for this article located at ComputerWorld is no longer available. . A group made up of representatives of the U.S. government and leading technology companies has relea. group, representatives, government, leading, technology, companies, relea. . Anthony Pell
The government finally did something right. That seemed to be the common theme at the RSA Data Security Conference on Monday afternoon with encryption experts praising the U.S. government's selection of an Advanced Encryption Standard, or AES. "I would like to . . . . The government finally did something right. That seemed to be the common theme at the RSA Data Security Conference on Monday afternoon with encryption experts praising the U.S. government's selection of an Advanced Encryption Standard, or AES. "I would like to say that after all this time that people bashed the government, it's nice that they did something right for once," said Adi Shamir, a professor in the applied mathematics department of Israel's Weizmann Institute of Science and the "S" in RSA, a popular encryption algorithm. Shamir and six other crypto gurus shared the stage to reveal their thoughts on the past and future of encryption in a panel discussion held at the conference here. At the top of the list of past successes: The U.S. National Institute of Standards and Technology's selection last summer of the Rijndael Algorithm as the AES, or the standard way to encrypt government content in the future. The link for this article located at ZDNet is no longer available. . Analysts commend the U.S. administration's choice of AES during the RSA Conference, emphasizing the prospects of cryptography.. AES Encryption, Crypto Standards, Data Security, Cryptography Review. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
Federal Information Processing Standard 140-1(FIPS 140-1) is entitled "Security Requirements for Cryptographic Modules". It's a standard that describes government requirements that hardware and software products should meet for Sensitive, but Unclassified (SBU) use. The standard was published by the National Institute . . . . Federal Information Processing Standard 140-1(FIPS 140-1) is entitled "Security Requirements for Cryptographic Modules". It's a standard that describes government requirements that hardware and software products should meet for Sensitive, but Unclassified (SBU) use. The standard was published by the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), has been adopted by the Canadian government's Communication Security Establishment (CSE), and is likely to be adopted by the financial community through the American National Standards Institute (ANSI). "The [FIPS 140-1] standard specifies the security requirements that are to be satisfied by a cryptographic module utilized within a security system protecting unclassified information within computer and telecommunication systems (including voice systems). The standard provides four increasing, qualitative levels of security: Level 1, Level 2, Level 3, and Level 4. These levels are intended to cover the wide range of potential applications and environments in which cryptographic modules may be employed. The security requirements cover areas related to the secure design and implementation of a cryptographic module. These areas include basic design and documentation, module interfaces, authorized roles and services, physical security, software security, operating system security, key management, cryptographic algorithms, electromagnetic interference/electromagnetic compatibility (EMI/EMC), and self-testing." The link for this article located at Corsec is no longer available. . FIPS 140-2 specifies security standards for cryptographic systems, facilitating trust in their implementation for critical applications.. FIPS 140-1 Compliance,Cryptography Guidelines, Secure Information Processing. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
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