pretty good privacy articles, videos, photos and opinions

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Adapting the <endeca_term>Pretty Good Privacy</endeca_term> Security Style to Power System Distributed Network Protocol

Adapting the Pretty Good Privacy Security Style to Power System Distributed Network Protocol

...protocol for power system communications. This paper proposes cyber-security based on Pretty Good Privacy (PGP) for DNP3 to strengthen computer network security. This PGP... Read more

21 September, 2011
OpenPGP Library for Java 2.5.8

OpenPGP Library for Java 2.5.8

PGPLib is a Pure Java PGP (Pretty Good Privacy) library. The Library provides two ways of development, with or... Read more

8 March, 2012
iPGMail 1.18

iPGMail 1.18

...recipient. The OpenPGP standard is described here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pretty_Good_Privacy Read more

29 October, 2011

Network Associates drops PGP email encryption

...privacy products are a tough sell. The company began selling PGP, or Pretty Good Privacy, to corporations in 1997 after it bought the software business... Read more

11 March, 2002 by Stefanie Olsen

PGP creator: Surveillance must be curbed

Phil Zimmermann, creator of Pretty Good Privacy encryption -- better known as PGP -- was in Italy this week... Read more

23 January, 2002 by Alberto D'Ottavi and Gaetano D'Elia

PGP creator Zimmerman joins Hush

...of the founding fathers of modern cryptography, Phil Zimmermann -- who created PGP (Pretty Good Privacy) and thus introduced a generation of computer users to email... Read more

20 February, 2001 by Will Knight

Pretty Good Privacy pretty much dead

...division after failing to find a buyer for the business. PGP, or "Pretty Good Privacy", is a popular PKI standard used for desktop and email... Read more

7 March, 2002 by Joey Gardiner

No master keys for me, thank you

...week's disclosure of a serious loophole in some versions of the Pretty Good Privacy encryption software, I'm fighting the temptation to say that... Read more

31 August, 2000 by Peter Coffee

Interview: Open-source advocate Eben Moglen

...while "trawling a bulletin board" in the early 1990s, he came across Pretty Good Privacy (PGP), the email encryption program written by Phil Zimmermann. Moglen... Read more

11 May, 2007 by Andrew Donoghue

Bug may pose risk to encrypted email

...as antispam mechanisms, Core said. GnuPG is a free replacement for the Pretty Good Privacy cryptographic technology. An email that uses OpenPGP cryptography can be... Read more

8 March, 2007 by Joris Evers

Tackling VoIP security concerns

...There are also add-on encryption products. Phil Zimmerman, creator of PGP (Pretty Good Privacy), recently released the beta of a secure, encrypted, open source... Read more

27 September, 2006 by Deb Shinder

Rupert Goodwins' Diary

...in other words, Phil Zimmermann is at it again. The inventor of Pretty Good Privacy or PGP, the first generally distributed public key encryption system... Read more

18 August, 2006

Rupert Goodwins' Diary

...in other words, Phil Zimmermann is at it again. The inventor of Pretty Good Privacy or PGP, the first generally distributed public key encryption system... Read more

18 August, 2006 by Rupert Goodwins

PGP pioneer pushes VoIP encryption

...world more than a decade ago in the form of software called Pretty Good Privacy. Now Zimmermann, who became an instant Internet hero in part... Read more

15 August, 2006 by Declan McCullagh

PGP Corporation sees potential of deperimeterisation

...plans for moving into identity management," explained Dunkelberger. PGP Corporation owns the Pretty Good Privacy codebase -- originally developed by Phil Zimmermann. Pretty Good Privacy (PGP... Read more

9 June, 2006 by Tom Espiner

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SoapyTablet

If ZTE have been selling below cost with the ZTE Blade / Orange San Francisco then given the current high street price of the Nokia Lumia 710, you...

3 hours ago by SoapyTablet on Huawei, ZTE face EU 'illegal state subsidies' probe
Burn-IT

Yes it is basically down to "nobody in control understands IT, is willing to admit it, or allow decisions to be delegated". Lets get someone in who...

4 hours ago by Burn-IT on 6 million wasted licences and £1,200 PCs: welcome to government IT
pjc158

So let me get this straight just because a consultant has oberved that mobile companies who get in trouble never recover, well we all might as well...

4 hours ago by pjc158 on RIM to lay off 2,000 on 1 June, says report
Jake Rayson

@191706> *their* own Mac Thank you for picking up the errant spelling :) @apexwm > Mac OS X for Intel machines is supposed to run in VirtualBox...

7 hours ago by Jake Rayson on xTreme Triple Booting: Linux, Mac & Windows
archerthom

I'm imagining Batman-style sonar imaging that will detect the cat and Lego bricks in the dark - I'm going to be disappointed aren't I?

7 hours ago by archerthom on Indoor navigation coming to a mobile near you soon
unlockworldwide

May I quote Horace Dediu, who runs the consultancy Asmyco who has repeatedly observed that mobile phone companies that fall into loss – even once...

7 hours ago by unlockworldwide on RIM to lay off 2,000 on 1 June, says report
NarayanaIyyappan

It is useful for their lifes,and also this matters are important for networking students.

11 hours ago by NarayanaIyyappan on IPv6 security: Plan now and quiz vendors
DarkDown

yeah! all we want free software

13 hours ago by DarkDown on Stallman: Free software battling for hearts and minds
Jack Strain

Just gimme a map to the fridge. :D

1 day ago by Jack Strain via Facebook on Indoor navigation coming to a mobile near you soon
Sungwoo

do You know that? it can install 4G Ram. So i buy 4g and install It work! I can run call of duty 4,6,7 [Modern war... 1,2,3] Call of duty 1 was...

2 days ago by Sungwoo on Loose Ends - Upgrading the Aspire One 522
itsajob

2. Bad idea. Making up patch cables loses you your commission from the cable supplier. 3. If you tidy up, other people can understand where the...

2 days ago by itsajob on Ten IT jobs to save up for those rare lulls
Paul Smyth

Is this classic FUD? One thing I would definitely have notice is a Mozilla threat to stop supporting GNU/Linux.

2 days ago by Paul Smyth via Facebook on Firefox rapid release improves Fedora Linux
UnderINK

I agree with the previous commenter wholeheartedly. I couldn't say it better myself. This is very 'Big Brother'. And while I agree with protecting...

2 days ago by UnderINK on European e-identity plan to be unveiled this month
Simon Bisson and Mary Branscombe

Nice to see that Turing's idea of a general purpose computer doing once-hardware-powered tasks in software is now universal ;-) Mary

2 days ago by Simon Bisson and Mary Branscombe on Software with everything
Jason Burchell

seriously now. I've only bothered to read a small bit of the comments. do me and the rest of the world a favour. stop saying it does not work or...

3 days ago by Jason Burchell via Facebook on Music industry negotiating over 24-bit downloads
Philip Charles Cohen

Read about it and weep, John Donahoe ... In addition to Visa’s V.me, there is now MasterCard’s PayPass digital wallet soon to arrive; another...

3 days ago by Philip Charles Cohen via Facebook on PayPal takes phone-based payments to the high street
apexwm

Leslie Satenstein : Where have you ever seen Mozilla even mention this? Firefox is the most popular browser in the GNU/Linux OS, so I don't see...

3 days ago by apexwm on Firefox rapid release improves Fedora Linux
songmaster

SHleG: Do you remember building a clockwork scorpion kit (I'm pretty sure I have a photo of it somewhere) — I think it was called something like...

3 days ago by songmaster on Software with everything
Chris Wortman

Good I love Yahoo! Their search engine is getting better than Google as of late. I find more of what I want on the first page, and usually within...

3 days ago by Chris Wortman via Facebook on Linux Mint 13 ramps up for KDE release
PatrickG

openhgs has made the point for Windows 8 multiple monitors without realising it! With Windows 7 you have to switch the mouse and so your focus...

3 days ago by PatrickG on Windows 8 could speed multi-monitor uptake