Welcome to part five, the final post in our series of commonly-asked questions that we were asked at the 2011 RSA conference. In this post, we will be covering the following questions: Where is yaSSL located? Does the yaSSL Embedded Web Server compete with nginx? Q: Where is yaSSL located? yaSSL is based out of […]
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Answers to Common Questions from RSA – Part 4
Welcome to part four in our series of commonly-asked questions that we were asked at the 2011 RSA conference. In this post, we will be covering the following questions: What does wolfSSL have as far as Certificate Management?Is the yaSSL Embedded Web Server similar to Apache / mod_ssl? Q: What does wolfSSL have as far […]
Read MoreMore TagNTRU Resistant to Quantum Attacks
As you know, yaSSL has partnered with Security Innovations to provide wolfSSL with NTRU cipher suites. Recently, Security Innovation and wolfSSL won the “Tomorrow’s Technology Today” award for Mobile Encryption. In addition, Security Innovation won the award for “Cryptography” for NTRU. One of the advantages that NTRU offers is resistance to quantum attacks. Other public […]
Read MoreMore TagyaSSL Embedded Web Server Benchmark
We recently ran a benchmark on the yaSSL Embedded Web Server and wanted to share the results. Our benchmarking tool was Apache ab. To learn more about ab, you can reference Apache’s documentation page (http://httpd.apache.org/docs/current/programs/ab.html), or if it is installed on your system, look at the ab man page (man ab). With a concurrency level […]
Read MoreMore TagAnswers to Common Questions from RSA – Part 3
Welcome to part three in our series of commonly-asked questions that we were asked at the 2011 RSA conference. In this post, we will be covering the following questions: Why is there a wolf in the yaSSL logo?How does wolfSSL compare to OpenSSL? Q: Why is there a wolf in the yaSSL logo?Why does a […]
Read MoreMore TagwolfSSL 1.9.0 Released
A new release of wolfSSL, 1.9.0, is now available. This release adds bug fixes, improved TLSv1.2 through testing and better hash/sig algo ids, –enable-webServer for the yaSSL embedded web server, improper AES key setup detection, user cert verify callback improvements, and more. More details can be found in the wolfSSL manual, which can be found […]
Read MoreMore TagSymantec’s Mario Ballano blogs about Android Malware, Android.Pjapps
See http://www.symantec.com/connect/blogs/android-threats-getting-steamy. From the post: “The aim of Android.Pjapps is to build a botnet controlled by a number of different Command and Control (C&C) servers. Among other things, it is able to install applications, navigate to websites, add bookmarks to your browser, send text messages, and optionally block text message responses.”
Read MoreMore TagAnswers to Common Questions from RSA – Part 2
To continue our series of commonly-asked questions which we were asked at the 2011 RSA conference, we will be answering the following questions: Can you port wolfSSL to my platform?If wolfSSL is open source, then how do you make money? Q: Can you port wolfSSL to my platform?yaSSL offers a range of consulting services in […]
Read MoreMore TagAnswers to Common Questions from RSA – Part 1
If you’ve been following our blog, you know we are planning on answering some common questions that we were asked during the 2011 RSA Conference. Today is the first post in this series. The first questions we will be looking at are: Does wolfSSL have sniffer, also known as SSL Inspection functionality?What about resiliency in […]
Read MoreMore TagCreating Secure Web-Based User Interfaces for Embedded Devices
While at FOSDEM 2011, we had the opportunity to listen to Arnout Vandecappelle’s presentation titled “Creating secure web based user interfaces for Embedded Devices.” We really enjoyed it, and wanted to share it with our readers. You can read the abstract, taken from mind.be, below: Abstract: A web interface is the easiest way to add […]
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