In 2004, the Korean Agency for Technology and Standards selected it as a standard cryptographic technique.
Since 1999, the protocol has been used by several companies in a variety of products, typically supplementing other cryptographic techniques.
Client-side encryption is the cryptographic technique of encrypting data before it is transmitted to a server in a computer network.
A sig block is easily forged, whereas a digital signature uses cryptographic techniques to provide verifiable proof of authorship.
The KDC will use cryptographic techniques to authenticate requesting users as themselves.
Client-side sessions use cookies and cryptographic techniques to maintain state without storing as much data on the server.
More recently, however, cryptographic techniques have been applied to a variety of commercial problems.
Chaffing and winnowing is a cryptographic technique to achieve confidentiality without using encryption when sending data over an insecure channel.
"Some cryptographic techniques for machine-to-machine data communications."
There is also research into how existing cryptographic techniques have to be modified to be able to cope with quantum adversaries.