| Expert Attempts to Crack RSA Encryption
Since the RSA algorithm was publicly announced in 1977,
breaking open the codes it generates has gone from being a
bad faculty cocktail party parlor trick to a multi national
coordinated effort by increasing the length of the
asymmetrical keys used in the encryption process. The larger
the prime numbers used to generate a key the more time is
required to unravel it.
As elegant as that math is, today’s RSA encryption keys
require brute force computing to crack. Ten of thousands of
processors have been working in concert across the internet
to break open a 72 bit key since December of 2002 with no
success.
The 1024 bit encryption key used by Cipherphone Cipherphones
that will be broken by a similar coordinated effort some
time in 22nd century but we make that timeline irrelevant by
seamlessly altering the key every second during a secured
transmission. Simply put the computer power needed to hack
into this system doesn’t exist.
The Nokia N70 with the G-L Cipherphone™ encryption software
is the perfect choice for governmental agencies,
politicians, police, lawyers, executives and anyone else who
recognizes the need to prevent confidential information from
falling into the wrong hands. |