"Ineffable Cryptography: A New Approach to Cybersecurity for Critical Infrastructure"

A team of mathematics researchers from RMIT University's Centre for Cyber Security Research and Innovation (CCSRI) collaborated with a tech startup called Tide Foundation to develop a breakthrough cybersecurity technology. The new technology, called "ineffable cryptography," enables data and devices to be locked with keys that no one will ever hold. It involves secretly generating and operating keys across a decentralized network of servers run by independent organizations. Only a part of a key is held by each server in the network. No one can see the full keys, the whole process they are partially executing, or the assets they are unlocking. By spreading the process invisibly across the network, the keys sought by hackers are never exposed. This article continues to discuss the new approach to cybersecurity for critical infrastructure.

Infrastructure Magazine reports "Ineffable Cryptography: A New Approach to Cybersecurity for Critical Infrastructure"

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