The most common method of securing e-mail is the old stand-by: PGP. Anyone can use PGP to ensure that messages are secure and only being read by those who were intended to read them. PGP has its ...
Your emails aren’t as private as you think. PGP encryption lets you secure messages, protect sensitive files, and keep prying eyes—hackers or governments—out of your business. Here’s how to start ...
For this smartphone security Rolling Review installment, we take a close look at PGP Mobile 9.9.0, part of PGP's PGP Encryption Platform. This suite of products does an impressive job of encrypting ...
In today’s world of constant surveillance and daily data breaches, it’s never been more important to take control of your own privacy. Whether you’re protecting ...
INDIANAPOLIS, July 13 /PRNewswire/ -- Future Systems Solutions, Inc. (www.fssdev.com) announces Casper Secure(TM) Drive Backup 2.0 for PGP Whole Disk Encryption, a major update to the first and only ...
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 ...
While PGP already offers a data encryption solution for the Mac, the latest release adds a pre-boot authentication to the Menlo Park-based company's data encryption offering for Mac's Tiger and ...
For more than a decade, the United States government classified encryption technology as a weapon. Now that label might actually apply. Security-consulting firm ...
So I am wondering, is PGP/GPG still the best standard for general purpose pubic key cryptography, in 2025? * Pro: Standard that's been around a long time, so there is widespread tool/app support (e.g.