View allAll Photos Tagged Encryption
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]
Chris Christie answers a FPAF question about surveillance and encryption at a Jefferson, IA meet-and-greet in early December
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
Security geek bonus round! This is me with an original World War 2 German Enigma encryption/decryption unit. It is a three-wheel unit and fully functions. I also happened to be wearing my Radio Orphan Annie Secret Society Decoder Ring that day.
www.secpoint.com PART 1: ift.tt/1t41zfD Snowed leaks leads to increase security in iOS 8 and Google Android 5 Lollipop. They now provide full encryption claiming they dont have the keys. Cops hate it and want full access. Europol: Only 100 cybercrime Gangs worldwide says Europol boss. There are only "around 100" cybercriminal kingpins behind global cybercrime, according to the head of Europol's Cybercrime Centre. "Criminals no longer come to our countries, they commit their crimes from a distance and because of this I cannot use the normal tools to catch them. Google Paid out $75K in bug bounties for Chrome 38 release
You’re warmly welcome to our honest review site of food for freedom program by Frank Tanner. Here, the fullest review will be divide into 3 maim Phases for good understanding. However, under the first phase, we’re going to discuss what you should be expecting from food for freedom...
reviewexcellent.com/food-for-freedom-program-food-for-fre...
Party Superstore on Lavender Hill. 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, Party Superstore, Fires, Arson, Crime, Police
Pront Messenger combines a decentralized messenger, wallet, and DApp browser into a powerful, private, and secure communication tool.
Pront Messenger uses the peer-to-peer protocol Whisper and end-to-end encryption to protect your communication from third party interface. Only you can view your messages.
Screenshot of Trojan.Ransomlock.V asking the user to pay to unlock the computer.
More Information
www.symantec.com/security_response/writeup.jsp?docid=2012...
Wibu-Systems' CodeMeter can securely store the X.509 certificates needed for OPC UA as well as all required private keys in a CmDongle to protect them from unauthorized accessing and copying. Possible use cases include OPC UA and the reliable authentication of webpages, email signatures, and encryptions
The Hebern Code Machine
Hebern Rotor Machine was an electro-mechanical encryption machine from 1917 single-rotor machine. National Cryptological Museum, National Security Agency,
Fort Meade, Maryland
Brass encryption caliper machine in which the separation of lines determines the letters. Joachim Deuerlin, Zwinger, Mathematisch-Physikalischer Salon. Dresden, Germany. Copyright 2019, James A. Glazier.
RT @reach2ratan: What is Cyber 3.0? #CyberSecurity #Databreach #Ransomware #Fintech #Blockchain #defstar5 #makeyourownlane #Mpgvip… t.co/ZlzQNp1qv2 (via Twitter twitter.com/DataCorpLTD/status/916569202143694848)
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
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]
Phil Zimmermann was the author of PGP, so he knows a thing or two about encryption. In this session he described his new secure VOIP protocol, and why it is so important.
The Polycom SoundStation2W is the conference phone that gives you the freedom to conference anywhere. With superior voice quality, proven wireless technologies, added security of voice encryption and the ability to dial through a mobile phone or computer, this product has set the standard for everyday conferencing.
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