The National Security Agency (NSA) has shared guidance on how to detect and replace outdated Transport Layer Security (TLS) protocol versions with up to date and secure variants. The US intelligence ...
Microsoft plans to disable older versions of the Transport Layer Security (TLS) protocol, the ubiquitous communications encryption used to protect information sent over networks and the Internet.
Amazon's own SES documentation tells developers the service "requires TLS 1.2 and recommends TLS 1.3." In testing, SES delivered over whatever the receiving server offered, including Transport Layer ...
A project that aims to increase the use of encryption by giving away free SSL/TLS certificates has issued its first one, marking the start of its beta program. The project, called Let’s Encrypt, is ...
In Part 1 of my series on Transport Layer Security (TLS) decryption, I went over a few basics of encryption, discussed TLS 1.2, and concluded by outlining the improvements TLS 1.3 provided. In this ...
SSL and TLS are similar technologies because they share a codebase, though one is better than the other. In fact, one is dead, and the other still reigns supreme to this day. By the end of this ...
On 2 June 2026, Encryption Consulting LLC announced a partnership and integration with F5, delivering automated certificate lifecycle management for F5 BIG-IP environments as TLS certificate lifespans ...
Rohnert Park, Calif. " January 7, 2010 " Red Condor, an award-winning provider of fully managed email security solutions, today released version 7.0 of its anti-spam software. The latest software ...
I have an exchange 2013 environment and we have a requirement to configure TLS 1.2 comms between our server and a customer in order to transmit sensitive data between us. How exactly is TLS configured ...
I have been charged with looking into setting up TLS Encryption on our Exchange 2003 server so we can communicate securely to a specific client. I just started reading up on this and have found some ...
Sending data in plain text just doesn’t cut it in an age of abundant hack attacks and mass metadata collection. Some of the biggest names on the Web—Facebook, Google, Twitter, etc.—have already ...