Protocol in a sentence as a noun

He's done nothing in crypto, and he's rolled his own protocol.

What does a clean ssh client do; not commit any protocol violations?

We are based on a new protocol, MTProto, built by our own specialists from scratch, with security in mind.

It's not clear how or if the plaintext is padded if it's too short, and it's not clear how the protocol handles a longer message.

The contest limitations rule out most of the likely attack vectors for breaking the protocol in the real world.

Dear Apple, please for the love of god and the good of everyone, get together with Google and iron out a common protocol for this stuff.

I see this guy's protocol as nothing but poisonous in the long run. He's off and created yet another processed food product that must be assumed to fail to meet the needs of the human body.

But that's no excuse for leading us toward a world where the only practical choices are proprietary chat clients and protocols.

The protocols are documented, and you have to use an implementation that implements something from within the last 5 years.

"they don't implement the original X11 protocol directly and rely on so-called window manager hints.

I believe that this application actually does connect to Apple's servers from the phone, but it doesn't then interpret the protocol on the device.

It's worth noting that this guy is running a kickstarter campaign re: "A free, up-to-date, crowdsourced protocol repository for the life sciences".

"If they can’t demonstrate a break in this obviously broken protocol using the same contest framework they’ve setup, then we’ll know that their contest is ********.

No other modern secure messaging protocol has this characteristic.

I'm worried that to people unfamiliar with modern crypto, the diagram of your protocol and the "technical FAQ" might sound credible or even convincing.

How can we be sure it will be better than the results we would obtain from mindlessly chaining ourselves to the red/green light?For better or for worse, the red/green light protocol is specific.

A passive attacker could, in an earlier version of the Dragonfly protocol, discern how many iterations through the loop had happened to find a valid point given a password.

Remember how sure they were that their protocol would be able to resist the eavesdropping efforts of the NSA and whatever other nefarious interlopers may come along?

Probably nobody is ever going to use Dragonfly in the real world, but watching people pick apart a new crypto protocol in public is amazing and hugely educational.

But even if this new protocol responds to different technical requirements, that shouldn't prevent the company from making it public and interoperable.

This meant that he often had to spend his time attempting to herd people towards a common goal, and defending what existed against misconceptions; even having to teach people what it meant to have a protocol at all.

If you think it's interesting, you can federate into our network, get a provably secure asynchronous forward secrecy protocol, and also have access to an existing 10MM user base.

This vulnerability can also be mitigated trivially by using bigger RSA keys, making the protocol Telegram-secure.

Moxie Marlinspike's response to that contest was devastating: he laid out a comically broken messaging protocol, one no professional would ever knowingly use, and showed that your contest rules would make that broken system survivable.

Plane cockpits are all but impenetrable[1] - the only reason that some of the 9/11 hijackers were successful was that the standard protocol for dealing with hijackers assumed that hijackers wanted to take the plane hostage for ransom, not use the plane as a weapon.

Protocol definitions

noun

(computer science) rules determining the format and transmission of data

noun

forms of ceremony and etiquette observed by diplomats and heads of state

noun

code of correct conduct; "safety protocols"; "academic protocol"