Vanish - Makes Sensitive Data Self-Destruct

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Pigeon
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Joined: Thu Mar 31, 2011 3:00 pm

Vanish - Makes Sensitive Data Self-Destruct

Post by Pigeon » Sun Apr 03, 2011 3:05 am

Vanish Makes Sensitive Data Self-Destruct

The NY Times reports on new software called Vanish, developed by computer scientists at the University of Washington, which makes sensitive electronic messages self destruct after a certain period of time. The researchers say they have struck upon a unique approach that relies on shattering an encryption key that is held by neither party in an e-mail exchange, but is widely scattered across a peer-to-peer file sharing system. Our goal was really to come up with a system where, through a property of nature, the message, or the data, disappears, says Amit Levy, who helped create Vanish. It has been released as a free, open-source tool that works with Firefox. To use Vanish, both the sender and the recipient must have installed the tool. The sender then highlights any sensitive text entered into the browser and presses the Vanish button. The tool encrypts the information with a key unknown even to the sender. That text can be read, for a limited time only, when the recipient highlights the text and presses the Vanish button to unscramble it. After eight hours, the message will be impossible to unscramble and will remain gibberish forever. Tadayoshi Kohno says Vanish makes it possible to control the lifetime of any type of data stored in the cloud, including information on Facebook, Google documents or blogs.

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This is an interesting concept. I like the part I highlighted. This could put a dent in social networks. Loads of content disappearing.

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Egg
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Location: In Your Bedroom. Hi! :D

Re: Vanish - Makes Sensitive Data Self-Destruct

Post by Egg » Mon Apr 04, 2011 9:40 pm

Pigeon wrote:

Vanish Makes Sensitive Data Self-Destruct

The NY Times reports on new software called Vanish, developed by computer scientists at the University of Washington, which makes sensitive electronic messages self destruct after a certain period of time. The researchers say they have struck upon a unique approach that relies on shattering an encryption key that is held by neither party in an e-mail exchange, but is widely scattered across a peer-to-peer file sharing system. Our goal was really to come up with a system where, through a property of nature, the message, or the data, disappears, says Amit Levy, who helped create Vanish. It has been released as a free, open-source tool that works with Firefox. To use Vanish, both the sender and the recipient must have installed the tool. The sender then highlights any sensitive text entered into the browser and presses the Vanish button. The tool encrypts the information with a key unknown even to the sender. That text can be read, for a limited time only, when the recipient highlights the text and presses the Vanish button to unscramble it. After eight hours, the message will be impossible to unscramble and will remain gibberish forever. Tadayoshi Kohno says Vanish makes it possible to control the lifetime of any type of data stored in the cloud, including information on Facebook, Google documents or blogs.

Link

This is an interesting concept. I like the part I highlighted. This could put a dent in social networks. Loads of content disappearing.
That's pretty cool. Very Mission Impossible :D Won't work on social networks if they don't install though, right?
Gotta make sure the person you're sending the info to doesn't copy and paste. ;)


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