
Cryptography in everyday life
When most people hear the word “cryptography,” they picture spies, secret codes, or government intelligence operations. In reality, cryptography is

When most people hear the word “cryptography,” they picture spies, secret codes, or government intelligence operations. In reality, cryptography is

When the World Wide Web first appeared, publishing online still required technical expertise. Creating a website involved writing HTML by
For decades, the security of modern cryptography has depended on the difficulty of mathematical problems. Factoring large numbers secures RSA.

Before the web, before social media, and even before most people had access to the Internet, there were bulletin board

Scams rarely follow a single script. What appears to be an isolated fraud attempt is usually part of a broader

Quantum computing sounds mathematical until one confronts the hardware. A qubit is not a line of code. It is a

When people see the small padlock icon in a browser bar, they often assume the website they are visiting is

One of the most important contributors to the modern Internet was Louis Pouzin, a French computer scientist whose CYCLADES network

When people think of cryptography, they often imagine secrecy. Encrypted messages, hidden conversations, locked files. But much of modern cryptography
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