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  2. Find and remove unusual activity on your AOL account

    help.aol.com/articles/find-and-remove-unusual...

    Depending on how you access your account, there can be up to 3 sections. If you see something you don't recognize, click Sign out or Remove next to it, then immediately change your password. • Recent activity - Devices or browsers that recently signed in. • Apps connected to your account - Apps you've given permission to access your info.

  3. Key disclosure law - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Key_disclosure_law

    Key disclosure laws, also known as mandatory key disclosure, is legislation that requires individuals to surrender cryptographic keys to law enforcement. The purpose is to allow access to material for confiscation or digital forensics purposes and use it either as evidence in a court of law or to enforce national security interests.

  4. tcpcrypt - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tcpcrypt

    Tcpcrypt provides opportunistic encryption — if either side does not support this extension, then the protocol falls back to regular unencrypted TCP. Tcpcrypt also provides encryption to any application using TCP, even ones that do not know about encryption.

  5. VeraCrypt - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/VeraCrypt

    VeraCrypt is a free and open-source utility for on-the-fly encryption (OTFE). [5] The software can create a virtual encrypted disk that works just like a regular disk but within a file.

  6. End-to-end encryption - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/End-to-end_encryption

    The term "end-to-end encryption" originally only meant that the communication is never decrypted during its transport from the sender to the receiver. [9] For example, around 2003, E2EE has been proposed as an additional layer of encryption for GSM [10] or TETRA, [11] in addition to the existing radio encryption protecting the communication between the mobile device and the network infrastructure.

  7. Email encryption - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Email_encryption

    One of the most commonly used email encryption extensions is STARTTLS.It is a TLS (SSL) layer over the plaintext communication, allowing email servers to upgrade their plaintext communication to encrypted communication.

  8. CryptoLocker - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CryptoLocker

    CryptoLocker typically propagated as an attachment to a seemingly innocuous email message, which appears to have been sent by a legitimate company. [5] A ZIP file attached to an email message contains an executable file with the filename and the icon disguised as a PDF file, taking advantage of Windows' default behaviour of hiding the extension from file names to disguise the real .EXE extension.

  9. Harvest now, decrypt later - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harvest_now,_decrypt_later

    Harvest now, decrypt later, also known as store now, decrypt later, steal now decrypt later or retrospective decryption, is a surveillance strategy that relies on the acquisition and long-term storage of currently unreadable encrypted data awaiting possible breakthroughs in decryption technology that would render it readable in the future - a hypothetical date referred to as Y2Q (a reference ...