enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. S/MIME - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/S/MIME

    S/MIME (Secure/Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions) is a standard for public-key encryption and signing of MIME data. S/MIME is on an IETF standards track and defined in a number of documents, most importantly RFC 8551 .

  3. MIME - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MIME

    Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions (MIME) is a standard that extends the format of email messages to support text in character sets other than ASCII, as well as attachments of audio, video, images, and application programs. Message bodies may consist of multiple parts, and header information may be specified in non-ASCII character sets.

  4. List of archive formats - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_archive_formats

    File extension(s) [a] MIME type [b] Official name [c] Platform [d] Description .br application/x-brotli Brotli: all Brotli is a compression algorithm developed by Google for textual web content, and typically achieves higher compression ratios than other algorithms for this use case. .bz2 application/x-bzip2 bzip2: Unix-like

  5. Media type - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Media_type

    In information and communications technology, a media type, [1] [2] content type [2] [3] or MIME type [1] [4] [5] is a two-part identifier for file formats and content formats.Their purpose is comparable to filename extensions and uniform type identifiers, in that they identify the intended data format.

  6. Domain Name System Security Extensions - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Domain_Name_System...

    DNS-based Authentication of Named Entities (DANE) is an IETF working group [18] with the goal of developing protocols and techniques that allow Internet applications to establish cryptographically secured communications with TLS, DTLS, SMTP, and S/MIME based on DNSSEC.

  7. X.509 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/X.509

    The Extensions field, if present, is a sequence of one or more certificate extensions. ... TLS/SSL and HTTPS use the RFC 5280 profile of X.509, as do S/MIME ...

  8. Cryptographic Message Syntax - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cryptographic_Message_Syntax

    CMS is used as the key cryptographic component of many other cryptographic standards, such as S/MIME, PKCS #12 and the RFC 3161 digital timestamping protocol. OpenSSL is open source software that can encrypt, decrypt, sign and verify, compress and uncompress CMS documents, using the openssl-cms command.

  9. Email - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Email

    The basic Internet message format used for email [33] is defined by RFC 5322, with encoding of non-ASCII data and multimedia content attachments defined in RFC 2045 through RFC 2049, collectively called Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions or MIME. The extensions in International email apply only to email. RFC 5322 replaced RFC 2822 in 2008.