cryptographic - Übersetzung nach Englisch
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cryptographic - Übersetzung nach Englisch

Cryptographic Log On; Cryptographic logon

cryptographic         
  • French]] cipher machine, with arms of [[Henri II of France]]
  • [[Poznań]] monument (''center'') to Polish cryptanalysts whose breaking of Germany's Enigma machine ciphers, beginning in 1932, altered the course of World War II
  • First page of a book by [[Al-Kindi]] which discusses encryption of messages
  • 1=''k'' = 3}}. In other words, the letters in the alphabet are shifted three in one direction to encrypt and three in the other direction to decrypt.
  • [[Whitfield Diffie]] and [[Martin Hellman]], authors of the first published paper on public-key cryptography.
  • Enciphered letter from [[Gabriel de Luetz d'Aramon]], [[French Ambassador to the Ottoman Empire]], after 1546, with partial decipherment
  • Cipher Bureau]], for 7 years before the war, and subsequent decryption at [[Bletchley Park]], was important to Allied victory.<ref name="kahnbook" />
  • PGP]] and OpenPGP compatible software for time-efficient encryption of messages
  • NSA headquarters in Fort Meade, Maryland
  • In this example the message is only signed and not encrypted.
1) Alice signs a message with her private key.
2) Bob can verify that Alice sent the message and that the message has not been modified.
  • Public-key cryptography, where different keys are used for encryption and decryption.
  • Reconstructed [[ancient Greek]] ''[[scytale]]'', an early cipher device
  • Symmetric-key cryptography, where a single key is used for encryption and decryption
PRACTICE AND STUDY OF SECURE COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUES
CryptologY; CryptographY; Cryptology; Cryptographer; Cryptographic; Codes and ciphers; Cyptography; Computer Cryptology; Cryptography Classification; Cryptography Notes; Cryptographic systems; Declarative Security System; Cryptographic Systems; Secret code; Code making; Polygraphia; Applied cryptography; Kriptografia; Mathematical cryptography; Cryptographically; Lightweight cipher
(adj.) = critográfico
Ex: The article "Cryptographic patents: at war and in peace" explores the dichotomy between the concepts of cryptography and patents.
cryptography         
  • French]] cipher machine, with arms of [[Henri II of France]]
  • [[Poznań]] monument (''center'') to Polish cryptanalysts whose breaking of Germany's Enigma machine ciphers, beginning in 1932, altered the course of World War II
  • First page of a book by [[Al-Kindi]] which discusses encryption of messages
  • 1=''k'' = 3}}. In other words, the letters in the alphabet are shifted three in one direction to encrypt and three in the other direction to decrypt.
  • [[Whitfield Diffie]] and [[Martin Hellman]], authors of the first published paper on public-key cryptography.
  • Enciphered letter from [[Gabriel de Luetz d'Aramon]], [[French Ambassador to the Ottoman Empire]], after 1546, with partial decipherment
  • Cipher Bureau]], for 7 years before the war, and subsequent decryption at [[Bletchley Park]], was important to Allied victory.<ref name="kahnbook" />
  • PGP]] and OpenPGP compatible software for time-efficient encryption of messages
  • NSA headquarters in Fort Meade, Maryland
  • In this example the message is only signed and not encrypted.
1) Alice signs a message with her private key.
2) Bob can verify that Alice sent the message and that the message has not been modified.
  • Public-key cryptography, where different keys are used for encryption and decryption.
  • Reconstructed [[ancient Greek]] ''[[scytale]]'', an early cipher device
  • Symmetric-key cryptography, where a single key is used for encryption and decryption
PRACTICE AND STUDY OF SECURE COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUES
CryptologY; CryptographY; Cryptology; Cryptographer; Cryptographic; Codes and ciphers; Cyptography; Computer Cryptology; Cryptography Classification; Cryptography Notes; Cryptographic systems; Declarative Security System; Cryptographic Systems; Secret code; Code making; Polygraphia; Applied cryptography; Kriptografia; Mathematical cryptography; Cryptographically; Lightweight cipher
(n.) = criptografía
Ex: These latter may include control of access to stored data by, say, automatic finger-print or voice-print identification, or protection of data while in transit through a privacy transformation, better known as cryptography.
Cryptography         
  • French]] cipher machine, with arms of [[Henri II of France]]
  • [[Poznań]] monument (''center'') to Polish cryptanalysts whose breaking of Germany's Enigma machine ciphers, beginning in 1932, altered the course of World War II
  • First page of a book by [[Al-Kindi]] which discusses encryption of messages
  • 1=''k'' = 3}}. In other words, the letters in the alphabet are shifted three in one direction to encrypt and three in the other direction to decrypt.
  • [[Whitfield Diffie]] and [[Martin Hellman]], authors of the first published paper on public-key cryptography.
  • Enciphered letter from [[Gabriel de Luetz d'Aramon]], [[French Ambassador to the Ottoman Empire]], after 1546, with partial decipherment
  • Cipher Bureau]], for 7 years before the war, and subsequent decryption at [[Bletchley Park]], was important to Allied victory.<ref name="kahnbook" />
  • PGP]] and OpenPGP compatible software for time-efficient encryption of messages
  • NSA headquarters in Fort Meade, Maryland
  • In this example the message is only signed and not encrypted.
1) Alice signs a message with her private key.
2) Bob can verify that Alice sent the message and that the message has not been modified.
  • Public-key cryptography, where different keys are used for encryption and decryption.
  • Reconstructed [[ancient Greek]] ''[[scytale]]'', an early cipher device
  • Symmetric-key cryptography, where a single key is used for encryption and decryption
PRACTICE AND STUDY OF SECURE COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUES
CryptologY; CryptographY; Cryptology; Cryptographer; Cryptographic; Codes and ciphers; Cyptography; Computer Cryptology; Cryptography Classification; Cryptography Notes; Cryptographic systems; Declarative Security System; Cryptographic Systems; Secret code; Code making; Polygraphia; Applied cryptography; Kriptografia; Mathematical cryptography; Cryptographically; Lightweight cipher
Criptografía

Definition

Cryptographic

Wikipedia

Cryptographic log on

Cryptographic log-on (CLO) is a process that uses Common Access Cards (CAC) and embedded Public Key Infrastructure (PKI) certificates to authenticate a user's identification to a workstation and network. It replaces the username and passwords for identifying and authenticating users. To log-on cryptographically to a CLO-enabled workstation, users simply insert their CAC into their workstation’s CAC reader and provide their Personal Identification Number (PIN).

The Navy/Marine Corps Intranet, among many other secure networks, uses CLO.

Beispiele aus Textkorpus für cryptographic
1. In the book, both Sophie and Robert are constantly exercising their wits in order to solve a series of cryptographic puzzles.
2. In the cryptographic community, opening software blueprints to outsiders who can point out errors is considered to be the safest way to go.
3. Because of the complex mathematics involved, a properly designed cryptographic system can be unbreakable even if its method is known to outsiders.
4. He praised the exemplary, transparent and trustful relations between the two countries in general and the two cryptographic agencies in particular. (VNA)
5. The rest of the list comprises defense and security–sensitive sectors such as cryptographic equipment manufacturing and research on infectious diseases.