News in the Category "Text"
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How to Scramble Your Mail
The first version of Bruce Schneier’s Applied Cryptography was called “the book that the National Security Agency wanted never to be published.” Maybe because it was full of programming code and instructions on how to apply powerful means to encode information so that no one—not even the government—could read it. Now comes the book’s second edition (Wiley, $49.95), fat as a phone book and loaded with new and improved crypto systems, including a method for defeating the “key escrow” mechanism in the government’s much maligned Clipper Chip. Cypher-punks will likely spam Santa’s e-mail box with requests for it…
Books in Review: Applied Cryptography
This is a book about modern cryptography—that is, it treats its subjects in a modern context. For example, the subject of symmetric cryptography is completed in little more than a page in chapter two; then the substance of the book begins. Many of the ideas covered are less than ten years old and most are less than twenty years old.
Audience
In his preface to this book, Whitfield Diffie notes that there was a hiatus in publishing on cryptography from the end of World War I until the publication of David Kahn’s history, The Codebreakers. Although Diffie is silent on the cause of this, it was the result of government policy. During the late 1960s, events began to conspire against the silence. Perhaps the most important event was the emergence of the automated teller machine, an application that simply could not be done in the clear. Whatever the cause, during the last twenty-five years thousands of papers, and dozens of books have been published on the subject…
E-Mail Security by Schneier
This is the third work that I have seen on the PGP (Pretty Good Privacy) text encryption and authentication system. (I understand that at least two more are in the works.) It is also the first to truly present the general concept of email security by covering the only other realistic option—the Internet Privacy Enhanced Mail (PEM) standard and (Mark) Riordan’s Internet Privacy Enhanced Mail (RIPEM) implementation. The book divides roughly into quarters discussing background, practical use, the PGP documentation, and the PEM RFCs.
The work is considerably different, in style, to the Stallings (…
Uncryptic Look at Cryptography
With the world accelerating onto the information superhighway, protection of data’s secrecy and correctness takes on increasing importance. The best tool for that protection is cryptography, a very old tool. Despite the importance and maturity of cryptography, few good reference books accessible to nontheorists have been published. This book is a great resource for the software professional who wants to know more about the subject.
Bruce Schneier covers three cryptographic topics of interest to the software professional: protocols, techniques, and algorithms. Additionally, the book contains C source code for many of the algorithms. Few software professionals will want to read the 600-page book cover to cover, but cryptography is so subtle and interconnected that it is worthwhile to at least skim the entire book and then return to study the parts of most immediate interest…
Applied Cryptography by Schneier
For anyone who wants to study cryptography, you can save yourself a lot of time and effort by getting Schneier’s book. From the simple Caesar cipher to RSA and beyond, there is nothing the book doesn’t at least touch on. Protocols, techniques, algorithms, and even source code are included. A “Real World” section looks both at specific implementations and at the politics of encryption.
Schneier notes that his work is *not* a mathematical text. It is difficult to say how much of a shortcoming this is for any given reader, but a safe bet is “not much”. For those who do need more rigorous treatments of specific topics, the bibliography lists almost a thousand references, all of which are described and cited within the book text at some point…
Sidebar photo of Bruce Schneier by Joe MacInnis.