Dei Sampu,
We can post anything we think/Or we like to (Should be decent ones) post... This is also one of the purpose for creating a blog....
Iruda mavane.. usefulla thaane keetaa indhaa vachikka... ;-)
public-key encryption A
cryptographic system that uses two
keys -- a public key known to everyone and a private or secret key known only to the recipient of the message. When John wants to send a secure message to Jane, he uses Jane's public key to
encrypt the message. Jane then uses her private key to
decrypt it.
An important element to the public key system is that the public and private keys are related in such a way that only the public key can be used to encrypt messages and only the corresponding private key can be used to decrypt them. Moreover, it is virtually impossible to deduce the private key if you know the public key.
Public-key systems, such as
Pretty Good Privacy (PGP), are becoming popular for transmitting information via the
Internet. They are extremely secure and relatively simple to use. The only difficulty with public-key systems is that you need to know the recipient's public key to encrypt a message for him or her. What's needed, therefore, is a global registry of public keys, which is one of the promises of the new
LDAP technology.
Public key cryptography was invented in 1976 by Whitfield Diffie and Martin Hellman. For this reason, it is sometime called Diffie-Hellman encryption. It is also called asymmetric encryption because it uses two keys instead of one key (symmetric encryption).
Njoy...