Following the lifting of export restrictions, most vendors supported 256-bit encryption.
And we were trying to figure out how can - and they claimed that it would be private because they support encryption.
The server supports remote use and strong encryption for remote connections.
In order to take advantage of encryption technology, you must have an Internet browser which supports 128-bit encryption.
OAuth 2.0 doesn't support signature, encryption, channel binding, or client verification.
They support encryption, and you keep the key.
Because what if you happened to roam to a carrier that wasn't supporting strong encryption?
It supports device-wide encryption and remote deletion of data on lost devices.
You may want to make sure your Web browsing software supports encryption - most current ones do.
These support interoperable signing and encryption of email messages in a federated environment.