Building PQSpread: a journey into building Quantum-Safe encryption, running locally, off-line, with just one HTML file.
Building PQSpread: a journey into building Quantum-Safe encryption, running locally, off-line, with just one HTML file.
Discover how I built a quantum-ready encryption tool using Alpine.js, Web Components, and Zenroom—all in a single HTML file.
cross-posted from: https://fed.dyne.org/post/334977
cross-posted from: https://fed.dyne.org/post/334651
Discover how I built a quantum-ready encryption tool using Alpine.js, Web Components, and Zenroom—all in a single HTML file.
Akatsuki Levi @lemmy.world
Why is there a forkbomb there?
5 0 Replyrumba @lemmy.zip FTA
Hi I'm Puria Nafisi Azizi the CTO of the Forkbomb company and this is my journey on how I built a serverless, Quantum-Safe encryption tool
9 0 ReplyAkatsuki Levi @lemmy.world
Aah thats the company who made that It looked kinda random to me, thought they were using something akin to a fork bomb to achieve quantum safety
2 0 Reply
MonkderVierte @lemmy.ml One of the words doesn't fit.
1 0 Replyx00z @lemmy.world
The blogpost is longer than the few lines of code that made this project.
2 1 Replyrumba @lemmy.zip I think nist had a JS kyber implementation too. It's cool that he showed how he overcame his problems and wired it together tho.
2 0 Replypuria 🦐 @fed.dyne.org
Ciao, this is the author, the implementation is in C gh:dyne/zenroom that we transpile in WASM, so available in js <3 But there are also other implmentations for sure like gh:dajiaji/crystals-kyber-js
2 0 Reply
raldone01 @lemmy.world I mean that is usually the case for programming posts.
1 0 Reply