boot protection encryption - meaning and definition. What is boot protection encryption
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What (who) is boot protection encryption - definition

Message Stream Encryption; Protocol header encryption; Protocol header encrypt; Protocol encryption; Protocol Encryption; BitTorrent protocol Encryption; BitTorrent Protocol Encryption; Bittorrent Protocol Encryption; Bittorrent protocol Encryption; Bittorrent protocol encryption; Bittorrent Protocol encryption; Bittorrent encryption; Protocol obfuscation; MSE/PE

/boot/         
DIRECTORY OF FILES FOR BOOTING THE OPERATING SYSTEM
/boot
In Linux, and other Unix-like operating systems, the directory holds files used in booting the operating system. The usage is standardized in the Filesystem Hierarchy Standard.
Boot (torture)         
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  • thumb
  • Leg screwing
INSTRUMENTS OF TORTURE AND INTERROGATION DESIGNED TO CAUSE CRUSHING INJURIES TO THE FOOT AND/OR LEG
Spanish boot; Malay boot; Foot press; Iron boot
The term boot refers to a family of instruments of torture and interrogation variously designed to cause crushing injuries to the foot and/or leg. The boot has taken many forms in various places and times.
Deniable encryption         
ENCRYPTION TECHNIQUE
Deniable Encryption
In cryptography and steganography, plausibly deniable encryption describes encryption techniques where the existence of an encrypted file or message is deniable in the sense that an adversary cannot prove that the plaintext data exists.See http://www.

Wikipedia

BitTorrent protocol encryption

Protocol encryption (PE), message stream encryption (MSE) or protocol header encrypt (PHE) are related features of some peer-to-peer file-sharing clients, including BitTorrent clients. They attempt to enhance privacy and confidentiality. In addition, they attempt to make traffic harder to identify by third parties including internet service providers (ISPs). However, encryption will not protect one from DMCA notices from sharing not legal content, as one is still uploading material and the monitoring firms can merely connect to the swarm.

MSE/PE is implemented in BitComet, BitTornado, Deluge, Flashget, KTorrent, libtorrent (used by various BitTorrent clients, including qBittorrent), Mainline, μTorrent, qBittorrent, rTorrent, Transmission, Tixati and Vuze. PHE was implemented in old versions of BitComet. Similar protocol obfuscation is supported in up-to-date versions of some other (non-BitTorrent) systems including eMule.