Word: keyed
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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...each have to decide how big, how small, how loud and how low-key we want our gifts to Harvard to be. But I wouldn't break out my checkbook quite yet if I were you. The University still has almost two full semesters left to court our cash--or convince us that it would be better spent on anything but Harvard...
Harvard Cheerleading Squad-Co-Captain, fall 1997; Crimson Key Society - Freshman Week Coordinator 1998; Prefect Program; Leverett House Committee - Secretary 1997; Women's Working Group...
Gilbert & Sullivan Players - President 1998 - Historian 1997; Crimson Key Society - 50th Anniv. Coordinator; HACIA Democracy Committee Chair 1998; Weatherhead Center for Int'l Affairs - Undergrad. Associate 1998-9; Harvard Radcliffe Dramatic Club
Encryption converts data into a locked or 'ciphertext' version. In order to decipher the data, a key is needed. The quality of an encryption key is measured in bits. The more bits, the merrier. The strongest commercially available encryption is currently 128 bits, (although there is some insane company that just announced 4,096 bit encryption...
...issue among the government and technical communities is just how good encryption should be and where. Even with the key system of securing network data, a persistent set of fast computers can "crack" the key by trying different permutations of bits. With the increasing speed of computers, keys get more complicated...