An unlikely combination of interests -- cartoons and math -- has inspired a sophomore at the University of Dayton to develop a new, and potentially unbreakable, encryption technology. Jason R.
With the combination of fast-evolving AI capabilities and the unprecedented compute performance that quantum computing is set to deliver by the end of the decade, a new approach to data security that ...
The discovery of quantum mechanics opened the door to fundamentally new ways of communicating, processing, and protecting data. With a quantum revolution well underway, long unimaginable opportunities ...
Hardware faults are leaking hundreds of supposedly unbreakable encryption keys on to the internet, researchers have found – and spy agencies may be exploiting the loophole to read secret messages. RSA ...
Cryptography, in the dictionary, is the art of writing or solving codes. In the security world, its the practice and study of techniques for secure communication in the presence of third parties ...
Republican senatators have proposed a new bill that would end the use of unbreakable encryption by tech companies on the basis that it helps “terrorists and other bad actors to conceal illicit ...
Even though the first round of Apple versus the FBI ended before it could even kick off, the battle between tech companies and law enforcement over how strong encryption should legally be has only ...
A security company is now offering "unbreakable encryption" to counter the rise of ransomware attacks. According to reports, it will be available on clouds and APIs. Similar to how the revolution was ...
Ever since writing has existed, people have wanted to send secret messages to one another--and others have wanted to intercept and read them. This is the second installment of a blog series taking you ...
Oscar Gonzalez is a Texas native who covered video games, conspiracy theories, misinformation and cryptocurrency. As tech companies double down on promises to better protect users' privacy, the US ...
In theory, we've had this licked for hundreds of years. We've long known how to create totally unbreakable encryption, ciphers so strong that no amount of modern supercomputing power could brute force ...