The Latest in IT Security

Latest encryption trick to thwart hackers is as sweet as Honey

30
Jan
2014

It seems like every other week another high-profile company’s servers are hacked. Last November, for example, Adobe suffered a security breach and as many as 150 million users’ may have been affected. Instead of crying about it, two security researchers are using these data dumps to try to thwart the next attackers, with a clever new method called Honey Encryption, reports MIT Technology Review. With Honey Encryption, when hackers try to decrypt a secure database, they won’t know if they’ve correctly guessed the encryption key. Normally, an incorrect guess would return a garbled mess. But with Honey Encryption, an incorrect guess will return a fake, but legitimate-looking database that is based in part on the database dumps from previous security

Comments are closed.

Categories

THURSDAY, MARCH 28, 2024
WHITE PAPERS

Mission-Critical Broadband – Why Governments Should Partner with Commercial Operators:
Many governments embrace mobile network operator (MNO) networks as ...

ARA at Scale: How to Choose a Solution That Grows With Your Needs:
Application release automation (ARA) tools enable best practices in...

The Multi-Model Database:
Part of the “new normal” where data and cloud applications are ...

Featured

Archives

Latest Comments