Software company Network Associates has stopped marketing its PGP e-mail encryption software, a further sign that privacy products are a tough sell. The Santa Clara ...
The inventor of Pretty Good Privacy e-mail encryption last week left Network Associates, Inc. — the company he joined after selling it the rights to PGP in 1997 ...
Join our daily and weekly newsletters for the latest updates and exclusive content on industry-leading AI coverage. Learn More Two years after the NSA controversy exploded in Facebook’s face, the ...
Hey all,<BR><BR>I've been tasked with creating a text file for database import that goes to a client system. This text file will be created twice a day and will contain sensitive information such as ...
Governments, Web browsers, nosy employers, and neighborhood hackers have never had more ways to spy on you. And while Internet users have an arsenal of strong privacy tools available to protect ...
The Global Email Encryption Software Market is expected to reach USD 5 Bn in 2026 and will expand to USD 14 Bn by 2033, registering a CAGR of 14% between 2026 and 2033. The growing sophistication of ...
In 2015, as part of the wave of encrypting all the things on the internet, encouraged by the Edward Snowden revelations, Facebook announced that it would allow users to receive encrypted emails from ...
Network Associates Inc. has unloaded its software portfolio based on the security technology PGP (Pretty Good Privacy) to a startup launched Monday by a collection of ...
PGP Corporation on Monday announced a new way for Windows users to encrypt their entire hard drives. Previous versions of the company's popular encryption software could only scramble chunks of a hard ...
If you have sent any plaintext confidential emails to someone (most likely you did), have you ever questioned yourself about the mail being tampered with or read by anyone during transit? If not, you ...