Hi Peter,
On Thu, Oct 27, 2011 at 10:45 AM, Peter Gutmann
wrote:
> Alfonso De Gregorio writes:
>
>>For a past project, I've been engineering a cryptographic appliance running
>>with Bull TrustWay CC2000
>>http://support.bull.com/ols/product/security/trustway/c2000/cc2000.html
>>It is a full-leng
On Thu, 27 Oct 2011 11:15, mar...@martinpaljak.net said:
> I don't know about PGP(.com), but GnuPG is picky about hardware key
> containers. Things like PKCS#11.
For the records: That is simply not true. We only demand an open API
specification for the HSM because we don't want to support binary
Hello,
On Wed, Oct 26, 2011 at 21:12, Thor Lancelot Simon wrote:
> I find myself needing a crypto card, preferably PCIe, with onboard
> key storage. The application is PGP,
I don't know about PGP(.com), but GnuPG is picky about hardware key
containers. Things like PKCS#11.
> As far as I know,
Thor Lancelot Simon schrieb:
> As far as I know, the only current products that do this are the
> IBM 4765 and the BCM586x line of chips. There were more sources
> once-upon-a-time of course -- nCipher and NetOctave/NBMK/etc. but
> those products seem to be gone now (and have obsolete PCI host
> i
Alfonso De Gregorio writes:
>For a past project, I've been engineering a cryptographic appliance running
>with Bull TrustWay CC2000
>http://support.bull.com/ols/product/security/trustway/c2000/cc2000.html
>It is a full-length PCI with on-board key storage.
Can you provide a bit more information
On Wed, Oct 26, 2011 at 8:12 PM, Thor Lancelot Simon wrote:
> I find myself needing a crypto card, preferably PCIe, with onboard
> key storage. The application is PGP, so I really need hardware that
> can use keys stored onboard to do arbitrary RSA operations -- rather
> than a protocol accellera