Showing 3 open source projects for "fips"

View related business solutions
  • AI-powered service management for IT and enterprise teams Icon
    AI-powered service management for IT and enterprise teams

    Enterprise-grade ITSM, for every business

    Give your IT, operations, and business teams the ability to deliver exceptional services—without the complexity. Maximize operational efficiency with refreshingly simple, AI-powered Freshservice.
    Try it Free
  • Streamline Azure Security with Palo Alto Networks VM-Series Icon
    Streamline Azure Security with Palo Alto Networks VM-Series

    Centrally manage physical and virtualized firewalls with Panorama

    Improve your security posture and reduce incident response time. Use the VM-Series to natively analyze Azure traffic and dynamically drive policy updates based on workload changes.
    Learn more
  • 1
    StrongKey FIDO Server (SKFS)

    StrongKey FIDO Server (SKFS)

    FIDO® Certified StrongKey FIDO Server (SKFS)

    An open source implementation of the FIDO2 protocol to support passwordless strong authentication using public-key cryptography. Supports registration, authentication (all platforms), and transaction authorization (for native Android apps).
    Downloads: 10 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • 2
    wolfSSL
    ...It works seamlessly in desktop, enterprise, and cloud environments as well. wolfSSL supports industry standards up to the current TLS 1.2 and DTLS 1.2, is up to 20 times smaller than OpenSSL, offers a simple API, an OpenSSL compatibility layer, OCSP and CRL support, is backed by the robust wolfCrypt cryptography library, and much more. wolfSSL relies on the FIPS 140-2 validated wolfCrypt library for all cryptographic functionality. Visit http://wolfssl.com/wolfSSL/fips.html for more info!
    Downloads: 14 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • 3
    ...NOTE: This project has been discontinued. It hasn't been worth it to maintain the project for a while now, so no more updates will be made to the plugin. The algorithm this plugin uses is based off FIPS-181 which was withdrawn by NIST a while back. The proliferation of password managers that seamlessly run on multiple platforms (some of which are free) has also removed almost all advantages of using randomly generated pronounceable passwords. If you have a use case for this plugin, reconsider it. If you still think using randomly generated pronounceable passwords are worth it for your use case, reconsider it some more.
    Downloads: 20 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • Previous
  • You're on page 1
  • Next
MongoDB Logo MongoDB