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  • 111NESSIE — For other uses, see Nessie (disambiguation). NESSIE (New European Schemes for Signatures, Integrity and Encryption) was a European research project funded from 2000–2003 to identify secure cryptographic primitives. The project was comparable to… …

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  • 112Tiger (cryptography) — Tiger General Designers Ross Anderson and Eli Biham First published 1996 Detail Digest sizes 192, 128, 160 Rounds 24 In cryptography, Tiger is a …

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  • 113Message authentication code — In cryptography, a message authentication code (often MAC) is a short piece of information used to authenticate a message. A MAC algorithm, sometimes called a keyed (cryptographic) hash function, accepts as input a secret key and an arbitrary… …

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  • 114One-key MAC — OMAC (One key MAC) is a message authentication code constructed from a block cipher much like the PMAC algorithm. Officially there are two OMAC algorithms (OMAC1 and OMAC2) which are both essentially the same except for a small tweak. OMAC1 is… …

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  • 115MD4 — General Designers Ronald Rivest First published October 1990[1] Series MD2, MD4, MD5, MD6 Detail Dige …

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  • 116Xen — This article is about the virtualization software. For other uses, see Xen (disambiguation). Xen Xen running NetBSD and three Linux distributions Developer(s) The Xen Project XenSource, Inc …

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  • 117Rolling paper — For the Wiz Khalifa album, see Rolling Papers (Wiz Khalifa album). Rolling papers are small sheets, rolls, or leaves of paper which are sold for rolling one s own cigarettes either by hand or with a rolling machine. When rolling a cigarette, one… …

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  • 118LM hash — Lanman redirects here. For other uses, see Lanman (disambiguation). LM hash, LanMan, or LAN Manager hash was the primary hash that Microsoft LAN Manager and Microsoft Windows versions prior to Windows NT used to store user passwords. Support for… …

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  • 119Free cash flow — In corporate finance, free cash flow (FCF) is a cash flow available for distribution among all the security holders of a company. They include equity holders, debt holders, preferred stock holders, convertibles holders, and so on.There are two… …

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  • 120Salt (cryptography) — In cryptography, a salt consists of random bits, creating one of the inputs to a one way function. The other input is usually a password or passphrase. The output of the one way function can be stored rather than the password, and still be used… …

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