I'm not saying this is the best, but WinZip supports AES and it's fairly widely used. It's free for 10 days. I think 7z is fully free and it supports AES as well. http://www.7-zip.org/7z.html
Jason On Fri, 2018-02-02 at 00:45 +0100, Jens Kubieziel wrote: > Hi all, > > recently I thought about a small task regarding encryption which I > give > to a class. One idea which comes to mind is to encrypt a file. > However > when I thought a bit about it, it seemed not so easy. I'm not aware > of > an easy-to-use software which does the task. But to test my theory I > put > out a call for action and asked people to encrypt a file and send it > to > me: > https://kubieziel.de/blog/archives/1633-Call-for-action-Please-send-m > e-an-encrypted-file.html > I received some answers so far: > https://vereinte.verwirrung.institute/p/FEE2018 > > However I hope my call reaches more people and I get more results. > Thatswhy I wanted to ask you to either send me a file or forward this > request. I'll update the pad above and will later write a longer > article > about it. > > Thanks a lot, > > -- > Jens Kubieziel https://www.kubieziel > .de > Unser ärgster Feind kann nur unser mangelnder Glaube an uns selbst > sein. Dr. Angela Merkel -- ....................................................................... ... R. Jason Cronk | Juris Doctor Privacy and Trust Consultant | IAPP Fellow of Information Privacy Enterprivacy Consulting Group | CIPT, CIPM, CIPP/US, PbD Ambassador ....................................................................... ... Check out our concise, intelligible, accessible, plain language GDPR privacy notice generator. -- Liberationtech is public & archives are searchable on Google. Violations of list guidelines will get you moderated: https://mailman.stanford.edu/mailman/listinfo/liberationtech. Unsubscribe, change to digest, or change password by emailing the moderator at zakwh...@stanford.edu.