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cryptography |
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cryptographyScience of creating and reading codes, for example, those produced by the German Enigma machine used in World War II, those used in the secure transmission of credit card details over the Internet, and those used to ensure the privacy of e-mail messages. Unencoded text (known as plaintext) is converted to an unreadable form (known as cyphertext) by the process of encryption. The recipient must then decrypt the message before it can be read. The breaking of such codes is known as cryptanalysis. No encryption method is completely unbreakable, but cryptanalysis of a strongly encrypted message can be so time-consuming and complex as to be almost impossible. The growth of the Internet and online commerce has brought an increasing demand for good cryptography. Most Internet cryptography systems involve the use of digital ‘keys’ to encrypt and decrypt messages. In symmetric-key cryptography, both sender and recipient use the same key. An example of this is the Data Encryption Standard (DES), used by the US government. In public-key cryptography, each party has both a freely-available public key (used by anyone to encrypt messages) and a private key (used to decrypt received messages). The program Pretty Good Privacy (PGP) is a popular and effective (and free for non-commercial use) implementation of public-key cryptography. Encrypted messages may be further protected by concealing them within large graphics, audio, or video files – a technique known as steganography.
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They are called cryptographically strong algorithms, and their output passes every statistical test that can be performed in a feasible amount of computer time to distinguish random numbers from numbers that fall into a pattern. Secure logging and auditing systems that are tamper-resistant and cryptographically signed add a layer of deterrent on top of actual security. Trust is established in new unfamiliar identity/key bindings because they are cryptographically signed by one or more parties that are already trusted. |
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