July 20, 2022, 12:42 p.m. |

Hacking News -- ScienceDaily www.sciencedaily.com

Many people and companies worry about sensitive data getting hacked, so encrypting files with digital keys has become more commonplace. Now, researchers have developed a durable molecular encryption key from sequence-defined polymers that are built and deconstructed in a sequential way. They hid their molecular key in the ink of a letter, which was mailed and then used to decrypt a file with text from a classic story.

back key wizard

SOC 2 Manager, Audit and Certification

@ Deloitte | US and CA Multiple Locations

Information Security Engineers

@ D. E. Shaw Research | New York City

Security Officer Hospital Mission Viejo

@ Allied Universal | Mission Viejo, CA, United States

Junior Offensive Cyber Security Researcher

@ Draper | Cambridge, MA, United States

Consultant reporting reglementaire

@ Talan | Luxembourg, Luxembourg

Chief Information Security Officer

@ Kantox | Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain