View allAll Photos Tagged Encryption
Fortune Brainstorm TECH 2016
WEDNESDAY, JULY 13TH, 2016: ASPEN, CO
8:00 AM–8:45 AM
BREAKFAST ROUNDTABLES
ENCRYPTION AND SECURITY FOR THE THREAT-SET
Ask any board chairman or CEO—the most pressing issue by far at any corporation this year is cybersecurity. Have you been hacked? (Yes.) Will you be hacked again? (Yes.) What can you do about it? Attend this session and hear from top industry experts about what to look for and what to do about it.
Steve Herrod, Managing Director, General Catalyst Partners
Paul Judge, Chairman, Luma
Lara J. Warner, Chief Compliance and Regulatory Affairs Officer, Credit Suisse Group
Michelle Zatlyn, Head of User Experience, CloudFlare
Moderator: Robert Hackett, Fortune
Intelligence track hosted by KPMG
PHOTOGRAPH BY Stuart Isett/Fortune Brainstorm TECH
Fortune Brainstorm TECH 2016
WEDNESDAY, JULY 13TH, 2016: ASPEN, CO
8:00 AM–8:45 AM
BREAKFAST ROUNDTABLES
ENCRYPTION AND SECURITY FOR THE THREAT-SET
Ask any board chairman or CEO—the most pressing issue by far at any corporation this year is cybersecurity. Have you been hacked? (Yes.) Will you be hacked again? (Yes.) What can you do about it? Attend this session and hear from top industry experts about what to look for and what to do about it.
Steve Herrod, Managing Director, General Catalyst Partners
Paul Judge, Chairman, Luma
Lara J. Warner, Chief Compliance and Regulatory Affairs Officer, Credit Suisse Group
Michelle Zatlyn, Head of User Experience, CloudFlare
Moderator: Robert Hackett, Fortune
Intelligence track hosted by KPMG
PHOTOGRAPH BY Stuart Isett/Fortune Brainstorm TECH
"Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances."
The First Amendment (Amendment I) to the United States Constitution is part of the Bill of Rights. The amendment prohibits the making of any law "respecting an establishment of religion", impeding the free exercise of religion, infringing on the freedom of speech, infringing on the freedom of the press, interfering with the right to peaceably assemble or prohibiting the petitioning for a governmental redress of grievances.
Video Encryption Software is useful for teachers and professors because they can record their lecture and send it to their student.
For More information Visit : www.solutioninfotech.in/video-encryption-software.aspx
GDPR: Whose problem is it anyway? - Help Net Security - t.co/g4AjE5PZni (via Twitter twitter.com/DataCorpLTD/status/955449598989889537)
3/9/16, Washington, D.C.
New America Conference on Cybersecurity at the Pavilion at the Ronald Reagin building in Washington, D.C. on March 9, 2016.
Photo by Gabriella Demczuk
Michael Vatis, Partner, Steptoe and Johnson LLP
Just a simple picture of a sunflower I took a while ago. My girlfriend loves this one and insisted I put it on Flickr! The inner spiral of the sunflower head always reminds me of Alan Turing now after the campaign last year to plant them in his memory. It's still a disgrace that he hasn't been officially pardoned by the British government considering the legacy he left the world in computing and encryption, and of course the key part he played in decrypting the Enigma machine.
Camera: Fujifilm X10
Lens: Fujinon Aspherical 7.1-28.4mm Æ’/2-2.8 @ 7.1mm
Exif: Æ’/2.8 | ISO 400 @ 1/170th sec
Comments and criticism welcome.
You can follow me further on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram (Nuzulugram).
The Director of the FBI has claimed that the organization is not striving to split Apple’s encryption or set up backdoor access to the company’s gadgets and products and services.
Crafting for Lawfare, a not-for-profit, addressing the ongoing standoff in between Apple and the FBI around acce...
First 1000 businesses who contacts honestechs.com will receive a business mobile app and the development fee will be waived. Contact us today.
‪#‎electronics‬ ‪#‎technology‬ ‪#‎tech‬ ‪#‎electronic‬ ‪#‎device‬ ‪#‎gadget‬ ‪#‎gadgets‬ ‪#‎instatech‬ ‪#‎instagood‬ ‪#‎geek‬ ‪#‎techie‬ ‪#‎nerd‬ ‪#‎techy‬ ‪#‎photooftheday‬ ‪#‎computers‬ ‪#‎laptops‬ ‪#‎hack‬ ‪#‎screen‬
honestechs.com/2016/02/22/fbi-director-denies-seeking-to-...
Electronics Mechanic Sal Catarino tests a KIV-7M Encryption Device in the Communications Security Division. Division personnel used Lean techniques and brainstorming to improve processes, earning a Shingo Silver Medallion. (Photo by Steve Grzezdzinski)
non-identifying portrait of a ficticious person who came up with a means of defeating all computer encryption.
Debenhams and the Party Superstore. The centre point of the Clapham Junction Riots on 8th August 2011.
London Riots, Riot, 8 August 2011, Clapham Junction, Looting, Loot, Lavender Hill, England Riots, 2011, Debenhams, Fires, Arson, Crime, Police, Party Superstore
Assembling, sharing and experimenting with private data of himself and random people found on the internet, young artist Dries Depoorter tackles in a thought-provoking way issues like social identity, big data sharing, encryption and (the lack of) protection of our online privacy.
27.03 to 29.05.2016
www.z33.be/en/driesdepoorter-databroker
Photo: Kristof Vrancken / Z33
The Enigma machine is an encryption device developed and used in the early- to mid-20th century to protect commercial, diplomatic and military communication. It was employed extensively by Nazi Germany during World War II, in all branches of the German military. ( Wikipedia )
danimal cannon - Dan Behrens of ARMCANNON - fake solo-album cover -- "a cinnamon land" is an anagram to his internet moniker "danimal cannon" --- the type on the right utilizes my newly invented "90 degrees clockwise" encryption
Instruction panel from a WWII German Enigma cipher machine, used to encrypt communications. It took major breakthroughs in mathematics and engineering to break the enccyption on this electro-mechanical device.
Taken at the National Cryptologic Museum in Fort Meade, MD.
I ordered four Yubico YubiKeys last week. They arrived today from Sweden. The idea behind this little encryption tool is brilliant. We are evaluating them for use in our computer security courses. Imagine, you can use this to authenticate and login to all your favourite Web 2.0 web sites. I am very keen to see how to tie this into an OpenID provider. The neat thing about this Yubikey is all you have to do is buy the key once and it's yours forever and there's no other cost to using it. Oh, and coincidentally, this week's SecurityNow podcast has an interview with the CEO of Yubico. www.grc.com/SecurityNow.htm#143
Amy Suo Wu
The Kandinsky Collective
Aksioma Project Space
Komenskega 18, Ljubljana
January 18 - February 17, 2017
Production: Aksioma - Institute for Contemporary Art, Ljubljana, 2017
Photo: Janez Janša
The Akamai Edge Conference is an annual gathering of the industry revolutionaries who are committed to creating leading edge experiences, realizing the full potential of what is possible in a Faster Forward World.
Learn more at www.akamai.com/edge
Photos courtesy of Dr.Suzanne Reynolds, Assistant Dean, School of Education at St.Thomas Aquinas College.
Partnering with NetApp, VMware and AWS, SafeNet security solutions ensure your data is secure in any environments.
Simon Singh - The Code Book
Anchor Books, 2000
Cover Illustration: Ashwini M. Jambotkar
"Combining a storyteller's sense of drama with a scientist's appreciation for technical perfection, he traces the evolution of its [encryption's] methods and reveals its dramatic effects on wars, nations, and individual lives."
Amy Suo Wu
The Kandinsky Collective
Aksioma Project Space
Komenskega 18, Ljubljana
January 18 - February 17, 2017
Production: Aksioma - Institute for Contemporary Art, Ljubljana, 2017
Photo: Janez Janša
This is the exact same message as the previous, but this one is encrypted using SecureIM in Trillian. Obviously, the message is no longer human readable.
Also of note is that it APPEARS that encrypted messages are broken apart and sent in pieces.
SecPoint Portable Penetrator Wifi Security Auditing in Famous Theme Park
How many open, less secure, weak encryption and strong encryption wifi networks can be found.
In this famous theme park?
Learn how secure the wifi networks are.
More information can be found at www.secpoint.com/portable-penetrator-wifi-theme-park.html
Wall of Sheep in action. Password and MAC addresses hidden to protect noobs. If you don't already know, never connect to wifi without encryption. Use VPN or TOR.
Rotor number VII from naval Enigma (Serial no. M15796)
All models of Enigma contained rotors, to scramble letters during the encryption process.
This rotor has been exploded to show its internal wiring. The electric current coming in to one letter, say N, is re-routed by the wiring, coming out at another letter, in this case R. This output goes on to become the input for the next rotor, again coming out at another letter.
[Bletchley Park]
Taken in Bletchley Park
Bletchley Park, British government cryptological establishment in operation during World War II. Bletchley Park was where Alan Turing and other agents of the Ultra intelligence project decoded the enemy’s secret messages, most notably those that had been encrypted with the German Enigma and Tunny cipher machines. Experts have suggested that the Bletchley Park code breakers may have shortened the war by as much as two years.
The Bletchley Park site in Buckinghamshire (now in Milton Keynes), England, was about 50 miles (80 km) northwest of London, conveniently located near a railway line that served both Oxford and Cambridge universities. The property consisted of a Victorian manor house and 58 acres (23 hectares) of grounds. The British government acquired it in 1938 and made it a station of the Government Code and Cypher School (GC&CS), designated as Station X. At the start of the war in 1939, the station had only 200 workers, but by late 1944 it had a staff of nearly 9,000, working in three shifts around the clock. Experts at crossword-puzzle solving and chess were among those who were hired. About three-fourths of the workers were women.
To facilitate their work, the staff designed and built equipment, most notably the bulky electromechanical code-breaking machines called Bombes. Later on, in January 1944, came Colossus, an early electronic computer with 1,600 vacuum tubes. The manor house was too small to accommodate everything and everyone, so dozens of wooden outbuildings had to be built. These buildings were called huts, although some were sizable. Turing was working in Hut 8 when he and his associates solved the Enigma. Other new buildings were built from cement blocks and identified by letters, such as Block B.
[Britannica.com]
German submarine U-534 is a Type IXC/40 U-boat of Nazi Germany's Kriegsmarine built for service during World War II. She was built in 1942 in Hamburg-Finkenwerder by Deutsche Werft AG as yard number 352. She was launched on 23 September 1942 and commissioned on 23 December with Oberleutnant zur See Herbert Nollau in command.
The U-534 is one of only four German World War II submarines in preserved condition remaining in the world, another being the IXC boat U-505 in Chicago's Museum of Science and Industry. U-534 was used mainly for training duties, and during her service she sank no other ships. A Royal Air Force bomber sank her on 5 May 1945 in the Kattegat 20 kilometres northeast of the Danish island of Anholt. U-534 was salvaged in 1993 and since February 2009 has been on display in Birkenhead, England, as part of the U-boat Story.
(Text Wikipedia)
Amy Suo Wu
The Kandinsky Collective
Aksioma Project Space
Komenskega 18, Ljubljana
January 18 - February 17, 2017
Production: Aksioma - Institute for Contemporary Art, Ljubljana, 2017
Photo: Janez Janša
Assembling, sharing and experimenting with private data of himself and random people found on the internet, young artist Dries Depoorter tackles in a thought-provoking way issues like social identity, big data sharing, encryption and (the lack of) protection of our online privacy.
27.03 to 29.05.2016
www.z33.be/en/driesdepoorter-databroker
Photo: Kristof Vrancken / Z33