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Government Secure Intranet (GSi) was a United Kingdom government wide area network, whose main purpose was to enable connected organisations to communicate electronically and securely at low protective marking levels. It was known for the '.gsi.gov.uk' family of domains for government email.
TitanFile was originally designed to be a robust and reliable one-way file transfer solution for users wishing to send and receive electronic documents that were too big or too confidential for email. [8] The company changed its focus to accommodate secure client correspondence in 2012.
WeTransfer B.V. is a Dutch internet-based computer file transfer service company that was founded in 2009 and based in Amsterdam. [3] In 2024, the company was acquired by Bending Spoons . [ 4 ]
In November 2009, the U.S. House of Representatives introduced the Secure Federal File Sharing Act, [76] which would, if enacted, prohibit the use of peer-to-peer file-sharing software by U.S. government employees and contractors on computers used for federal government work. [77] The bill has died with the adjournment of 111th Congress.
Tumbleweed Communications Corp. provided secure messaging and secure file transfer solutions for enterprise and government customers. [1] The company became a publicly traded company in 1999, trading on the NASDAQ stock exchange under the symbol TMWD. [2] Tumbleweed Communications merged with Axway, a subsidiary of Sopra Group, in 2008. [3]
It enables users to log in to services from numerous government agencies using the same username and password. Login.gov was jointly developed by 18F and the US Digital Service . [ 1 ] The initiative was announced in a blog post in May 2016 [ 2 ] and the new system was launched in April 2017 [ 3 ] as a replacement for Connect.Gov .
As development work progressed, the scope of the Secsh File Transfer project expanded to include file access and file management. Eventually, development stalled as some committee members began to view SFTP as a file system protocol, not just a file access or file transfer protocol, which places it beyond the purview of the working group. [6]