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  2. Jarmila Wolfe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jarmila_Wolfe

    Jarmila Wolfe (née Gajdošová, formerly Groth; born 26 April 1987) is a Slovak-Australian former tennis player.. In her career, she won two singles titles and one doubles title on the WTA Tour, as well as 14 singles and ten doubles titles on the ITF Women's Circuit.

  3. AES Corporation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AES_Corporation

    AES is headquartered in Arlington, Virginia, and is one of the world's leading power companies, generating and distributing electric power in 15 countries and employing 10,500 people worldwide. AES Corporation is a global Fortune 500 power company. AES Ranks in the Top Ten of Fast Company's 2022 Best Workplaces for Innovators.

  4. Advanced Encryption Standard - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Advanced_Encryption_Standard

    This result has been further improved to 2 126.0 for AES-128, 2 189.9 for AES-192 and 2 254.3 for AES-256, which are the current best results in key recovery attack against AES. This is a very small gain, as a 126-bit key (instead of 128 bits) would still take billions of years to brute force on current and foreseeable hardware.

  5. Rijndael S-box - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rijndael_S-box

    The Rijndael S-box is a substitution box (lookup table) used in the Rijndael cipher, on which the Advanced Encryption Standard (AES) cryptographic algorithm is based. [1] Forward S-box [ edit ]

  6. Disk encryption theory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Disk_encryption_theory

    XTS-AES was standardized on December 19, 2007 as IEEE P1619. The XTS standard requires using a different key for the IV encryption than for the block encryption; this differs from XEX which uses only a single key.: 1–4 As a result, users wanting AES-256 and AES-128 encryption must supply 512 bits and 256 bits of key respectively.

  7. XSL attack - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/XSL_attack

    What concerns us the most about AES is its simple algebraic structure… No other block cipher we know of has such a simple algebraic representation. We have no idea whether this leads to an attack or not, but not knowing is reason enough to be skeptical about the use of AES." (Practical Cryptography, 2003, pp. 56–57) References

  8. Advanced Encryption Standard process - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Advanced_Encryption...

    The Advanced Encryption Standard (AES), the symmetric block cipher ratified as a standard by National Institute of Standards and Technology of the United States (NIST), was chosen using a process lasting from 1997 to 2000 that was markedly more open and transparent than its predecessor, the Data Encryption Standard (DES). This process won ...

  9. Format-preserving encryption - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Format-preserving_encryption

    Where AES is mentioned in the following discussion, any other good block cipher would work as well. The FPE constructions of Black and Rogaway [ edit ] Implementing FPE with security provably related to that of the underlying block cipher was first undertaken in a paper by cryptographers John Black and Phillip Rogaway , [1] which described ...