Secure Networks, Encryption Cryptology etc
Your network is only as secure as the files on it. Below you can download the SSC2 code in compiled form or source code form. Use this code to enhance your network security as well as data storage security.
 

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Who uses SSC2 ?

Industries and Government Agencies: who wish to add an additional layer of security to their current encryption code scheme.

Educators: Who wish to teach students how to encrypt messages.

Normal Computer Users: Who wish to encrypt documents, messages, email or anything on their hard-drive.

 

 

 

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Resources:

Encryption
Prevents any non-authorized party from reading or changing data. The level of protection provided by encryption is determined by an encryption algorithm. In a brute-force attack, the strength is measured by the number of possible keys and the key size. For example, a Triple-Data Encryption Standard system (3 DES) uses 112-bit or 168-bit keys and, based on currently available processing power, is virtually immune to brute-force attacks. Business to Business VPNs (Extranets) share sensitive data with multiple organizations, so demand the highest level of security. This requires public key encryption and/or secure key exchange, both of which are designed to eliminate the risk of the key becoming known to an unauthorized party. (Source: http://www.stallion.com/html/support/glossary.html#E)

Cryptology

The study of techniques that can be used to conceal information, or reveal information that has been previously concealed; that is, the combination of cryptanalysis, cryptography and steganography. See also: Cryptanalysis Cryptography Decryption. Encryption Plaintext Public Key Cryptography Private Key (or Symmetric) Cryptography. Steganography
Source(www.itsecurity.com/cs.htm)

Network Security:
Protection of networks and their services from unauthorized modification, destruction, or disclosure, and provision of assurance that the network performs its critical functions correctly and there are no harmful side-effects. Network security includes providing for data integrity.
Source: www.tsl.state.tx.us/ld/pubs/compsecurity/glossary.html

ssh - The secure shell. A cryptographically strong replacement for rlogin, telnet, ftp, and other programs. Protects against ``spoofing'', man in the middle attacks, and packet sniffing.
Source: (www.tldp.org/HOWTO/mini/Domain-10.html)

DES Encryption

Hackers - Computer users who understand the "ins and outs" of computers, networks, and the Internet in general. Hackers are generally benign. See also crackers.
Source: (www.capoferri.com/web_glossary.htm)

encode - To convert plain text into a different form by means of a code.
Source (www.nsa.gov/programs/kids/glossary.shtml)

network - an interconnected system of things or people; "he owned a network of shops"; "retirement meant dropping out of a whole network of people who had been part of my life"; "tangled in a web of cloth"
Source( www.cogsci.princeton.edu/cgi-bin/webwn)

security - the state of being free from danger or injury; "we support the armed services in the name of national security"
Source (www.cogsci.princeton.edu/cgi-bin/webwn)