Technology
AES
AES is the global standard for symmetric-key encryption, utilizing a block cipher to secure data across 128, 192, and 256-bit keys.
Established by NIST in 2001 (FIPS 197) to replace the aging DES, the Advanced Encryption Standard (AES) is the backbone of modern digital security. It operates on 128-bit blocks using a substitution-permutation network, making it computationally infeasible to crack with current technology. Most modern CPUs, including those from Intel and AMD, feature hardware-level AES-NI instructions to process this encryption at wire speed. Whether you are securing a WPA3 Wi-Fi network or encrypting sensitive government files at the Top Secret level, AES-256 is the industry-standard choice for high-performance, non-negotiable data protection.
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