Skip to main content

Home/ Math 1111: Cryptography/ Group items tagged secrecy

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Abbey Roberts

Can you keep a secret? The Bletchley codebreakers 70 years on - Telegraph - 4 views

  •  
    Interesting article describing the people who worked at Bletchley Park (UK) during WWII and the secrecy act that kept them silent. The article makes compelling comparisons to people today like Edward Snowden, who are legally bound to secrecy but ignore it. What are the ethical implications of being asked to keep military secrets? Of sharing military secrets? How do the differences between today's generation and the WWII generation affect how these ethics are viewed?
Derek Bruff

Securing Medical Research: A Cybersecurity Point of View (Bruce Schneier) - 0 views

  •  
    "The problem of securing biological research data is a difficult and complicated one. Our ability to secure data on computers is not robust enough to ensure the security of existing data sets. Lessons from cryptography illustrate that neither secrecy measures, such as deleting technical details, nor national solutions, such as export controls, will work. "
kims46

Kerckhoffs' history and principles of military cryptography, translated and adnotated. ... - 1 views

  •  
    This is a cryptography blogger's translation of Kerckhoff's article about military cryptography. He denotes that secret methods of communication are limited to higher officers due to potential leakage; but by limiting cryptographic use, are they potentially putting at risk the safety of lesser positions in order to keep the secrecy of their cipher methods? Is this just the inevitable nature of cryptography in general?
1 - 4 of 4
Showing 20 items per page