> From: Ben Eisenbraun [mailto:[email protected]] > > On Fri, Sep 18, 2015 at 04:00:17PM +0000, Edward Ned Harvey (bblisa4) > wrote: > > Any information you care to protect with HTTPS against random people > > maintaining the routers of the Internet, you probably also care to > > protect against random developers and sysadmins maintaining the > > networks and servers at the remote end of the HTTPS connection. > > I think you're off message here, since the sysadmins and devs at the > remote end already have access to my data. It's only the password that > you're protecting from them, so that I can presumably re-use it > somewhere else.
What we're doing allows authentication *and* encryption to take place, without exposing passwords or encryption keys. Did I mention that Concept Blossom's business is encrypted file sync & sharing? This is our main differentiator and our main competitive advantage. Unlike Dropbox, Google Drive, etc, we never have access to any passwords or encryption keys. _______________________________________________ bblisa mailing list [email protected] http://www.bblisa.org/mailman/listinfo/bblisa
