Public-key cryptography - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Public-key cryptography is a cryptographic approach, employed by many cryptographic algorithms and cryptosystems, whose distinguishing characteristic is the use of asymmetric key algorithms instead o...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Public-key_cryptography
Cryptography - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Cryptography (or cryptology ; from Greek , kryptos , "hidden, secret"; and , gráphō , "I write", or , -logy|-logia , respectively) is the practice and study of hiding information. Modern cryp...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cryptography
Asymmetric key encryption uses different keys for encryption and decryption. These two keys are mathematically related and they form a key pair. One of these two keys should be kept private, called private-key, and the other can be made public (it can even be sent in mail), called public-key. ... Parent Category: Encryption...
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Public key cryptography was invented in 1976 by Whitfield Diffie and Martin Hellman. For this reason, it is sometime called Diffie-Hellman encryption. It is also called asymmetric encryption because it uses two keys instead of one key (symmetric encryption).
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public-key cryptography ... (redirected from Asymmetric key encryption) ... Asymmetric key encryption; Asymmetric key encryption algorithm; Asymmetric key encryption algorithm; Asymmetric key encryption algorithm; Asymmetric Key Synchronous Cipher Modulation; Asymmetric Logical Unit Access;
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public-key cryptography ... (redirected from Asymmetric key encryption algorithm) ... Asymmetric key algorithms; Asymmetric key algorithms; Asymmetric key cryptography; Asymmetric key cryptography; Asymmetric key cryptography; Asymmetric key encryption; Asymmetric key encryption; Asymmetric key encryption;
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Asymmetric Cryptography (Also known as public key cryptography.) Encryption software that requires two keys: a public key and a private key. Encryption software users distribute their public key, but keep their private key to themselves.
www.netaction.org/encrypt/terms.html www.netaction.org/encrypt/terms.html
Such one-way functions, of which this is perhaps the simplest example, are at the bottom of all public-key encryption. They make asymmetric ciphers possible. To use RSA encryption, Alice first secretly chooses two prime numbers, p and q, each more than a hundred digits long.
www.mycrypto.net/encryption/encryption_public.html www.mycrypto.net/encryption/encryption_public.html
There are two basic types of encryption: private key encryption (also called symmetric) and public key encryption (also called asymmetric).  Private key encryption dates from at least the time of Julius Caesar (1st century BCE) who replaced each letter by the one following it in the alphabet.  Uijt nfuipe jt opu tfdvsf.
csc.colstate.edu/bosworth/cpsc6126/PublicKey.htm csc.colstate.edu/bosworth/cpsc6126/PublicKey.htm
Public-key is commonly used to identify a cryptographic method that uses an asymmetric-key pair3: a public-key and a private-key 4. Public-key encryption ...
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