Encryption technology allows people using electronic networks to ensure that the messages they send remain private--secure from hackers, industrial espionage, government wiretap abuses, and spies. Encryption technology will prove vital to the future of electronic commerce. For example, thefts of nuclear secrets from U.S. national laboratories would be much less likely if the labs' commercial software had built-in encryption features that could be used to limit unauthorized access--a type of security product discouraged by export controls. For years the U.S. government has struggled unsuccessfully to control the export of encryption technology from this country. Those ineffectual controls do, however, adversely affect the competitive positio...
Cryptology is the scientific study and practice of making (cryptography) and breaking (cryptanalysis...
The speedy progress of the digital revolution has significantly changed the manner in which indivi...
In 2015 more than 150 million records and $400 billion were lost due to publicly-reported criminal a...
Controlling the flow of information in the information age is as important as controlling the flow o...
The author describes how cryptography can be used to address modern business requirements such as id...
As the U.S. Senate deliberates over several key national security appointments, an old saying comes ...
Both businesses and private individuals are trying to protect the confidentiality of electronic prop...
The Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) issued on 27 March 1997 a recommen...
The policy concerns intersecting patent law and cryptographic technology relate to the technology\u2...
The predicated enormous boom in electronic commerce will only flower when users are assured that the...
With the meteoric rise of the Internet and e-commerce in the 1990s came great attention to the probl...
This Note argues that although privacy and economic concerns have ruled the encryption debate during...
Information security is playing an increasingly important role in modern society, driven especially ...
Encryption, understood on a basic level as the process of scrambling information to disguise its con...
Includes bibliographical references (p. 111-118).Thesis (S.M.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technolog...
Cryptology is the scientific study and practice of making (cryptography) and breaking (cryptanalysis...
The speedy progress of the digital revolution has significantly changed the manner in which indivi...
In 2015 more than 150 million records and $400 billion were lost due to publicly-reported criminal a...
Controlling the flow of information in the information age is as important as controlling the flow o...
The author describes how cryptography can be used to address modern business requirements such as id...
As the U.S. Senate deliberates over several key national security appointments, an old saying comes ...
Both businesses and private individuals are trying to protect the confidentiality of electronic prop...
The Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) issued on 27 March 1997 a recommen...
The policy concerns intersecting patent law and cryptographic technology relate to the technology\u2...
The predicated enormous boom in electronic commerce will only flower when users are assured that the...
With the meteoric rise of the Internet and e-commerce in the 1990s came great attention to the probl...
This Note argues that although privacy and economic concerns have ruled the encryption debate during...
Information security is playing an increasingly important role in modern society, driven especially ...
Encryption, understood on a basic level as the process of scrambling information to disguise its con...
Includes bibliographical references (p. 111-118).Thesis (S.M.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technolog...
Cryptology is the scientific study and practice of making (cryptography) and breaking (cryptanalysis...
The speedy progress of the digital revolution has significantly changed the manner in which indivi...
In 2015 more than 150 million records and $400 billion were lost due to publicly-reported criminal a...