21.12.2013 09:20 Uhr, Quelle: Macworld UK
'PGP' encryption has had stay-powering but does it meet today's enterprise demands?
PGP encryption, as industry old-timers know, started out as "Pretty Good Privacy" invented by Phil Zimmermann in 1991, and since then, was sold on to various corporate owners until it ended in the hands of Symantec in 2010. While it is a widely used vintage brands, does PGP public-key encryption still meet today's enterprise demands, given the rise of cloud computing and mobile?Enterprise managers are somewhat mixed on that, though PGP, over two decades old, is so well known that Symantec, which dropped the PGP moniker in favor of "Symantec Encryption," still reminds everyone it's "powered by PGP technology." In addition, there's "OpenPGP," the IETF standard that was championed by Phil Zimmermann, that can be implemented by companies without licensing.Symantec declines to discuss how many customers it has exactly in the PGP realm, but it does point out that Symantec has invested resources in developing what it inherited with PGP. For example, Symantec offers client app software for both Apple
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