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Echoworx's automated S/MIME feature modernises enterprise email encryption by removing manual workflows and ensuring ...
S/MIME isn’t necessarily the best method to use, but it’s a stable, open standard and probably the most common e-mail encryption method I’ve seen in use. [ Die, unknown executable!
Like S/MIME, the configuration and maintenance of PGP can be a time consuming pain. There's an additional requirement to maintain your private key in a less standardized way.
S/MIME has been a universal standard in securing email for very long time, and rightfully so. But most of its usages has been in the business world, not the public realm.
If you wanted to use an encryption standard like S/MIME for your email account (before it was discovered to be vulnerable, that is), you would have to procure your own encryption keys and set them ...
Most S/MIME clients don’t make it easy to create rules that enable S/MIME for some recipients and not for others. It’s either all or nothing, or it’s manual.
Other researchers behind the PGP and S/MIME research include Damian Poddebniak, Christian Dresen, Jens Müller, Fabian Ising, Simon Friedberger, juraj somorovsky, and Jörg Schwenk.
If you've been using PGP or S/MIME to securely send and receive sensitive emails, you'll want to stop using them right away, as a group of European researchers have found vulnerabilities in both ...
S/MIME is an end-to-end email encryption standard that allows email clients to scramble the contents of an email before it's sent over the internet using a personal certificate.