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Google Tink - A multi-language, cross-platform library that provides cryptographic APIs that are secure, easy to use correctly, and hard(er) to misuse. |
Google has released Tink and which is a multi-language, cross-platform cryptographic library. With OpenSSL we have complex bindings and which were often focused on specific systems, such as for DLLs in Windows systems. Tink is open-source and focuses on creating simple APIs and which should make the infrastructure more portable |
Jan 10, 2022
by Google
Crypto Blogs |
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Hacking group says it has found encryption keys needed to unlock the PS5 |
Hacking group Fail0verflow announced Sunday evening that it had obtained the encryption "root keys" for the PlayStation 5, an important first step in any effort to unlock the system and allow users to run homebrew software. The tweeted announcement includes an image of what appears to be the PS5's decrypted firmware files, highlighting code that references the system's "secure loader." |
Dec 11, 2021
by
Kyle Orland - Ars Technica
Tech News |
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How Pretty Good Privacy works, and how you can use it for secure communication |
Sending sensitive information through the internet is always nerve-racking. What if somebody else sees the bank information I'm sending? Or even those dank memes that should not be spoken |
Jan 17, 2021
by
freeCodeCamp.org
Tech Blogs |
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Victory: Indiana Supreme Court Rules that Police Can't Force Smartphone User to Unlock Her Phone |
In courts across the country, EFF has been arguing that the police cannot constitutionally require you to unlock your phone or give them your password, and today the Indiana Supreme Court issued a strong opinion agreeing with us. In the case, Seo v. State, the court found that the Fifth Amendment... |
Nov 25, 2020
by
Andrew Crocker - Electronic Frontier Foundation
Tech News |
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The EARN IT Bill Is the Government's Plan to Scan Every Message Online |
Imagine an Internet where the law required every message sent to be read by government-approved scanning software. Companies that handle such messages wouldn't be allowed to securely encrypt them, or they'd lose legal protections that allow them to operate.Take ActionStop the Graham-Blumenthal... |
Mar 16, 2020
by Joe Mullin via Electronic Frontier Foundation
Crypto News |