Kryptor
ChaCha20-BLAKE2b
Kryptor | ChaCha20-BLAKE2b | |
---|---|---|
15 | 2 | |
400 | 4 | |
- | - | |
5.6 | 1.8 | |
5 months ago | about 2 years ago | |
C# | C# | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
Kryptor
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Integrate Krypto for Xchacha20 encryption?
Bit new to this, but would it be possible to have Peazip as a frontend that supports Xchacha20? I believe it could interface with something like Kryptor here: https://www.kryptor.co.uk/
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currently packaging a Binary executable: "File exists but is not an executable"
i am currently packaging https://github.com/samuel-lucas6/Kryptor. i already tried building it from source, but i got an error and nobody was able to help me. so i am now resorting to just packaging the supplied blob.
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Build vs Buy: age old dilemma
And I have yet to write my own file encryption tool… At least others are doing it for me.
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need help packaging dotnet application: "error MSBUILD0003: Please specify the project or solution file to build", even though i did that via projectFile.
{ lib, fetchFromGitHub, fetchzip, stdenvNoCC, dotnetCorePackages, buildDotnetPackage}: let repo = fetchzip { url = "https://github.com/samuel-lucas6/Kryptor/archive/refs/tags/v4.0.1.zip"; sha256 = "sha256-SK4TZg/T6SFimF83iwv3dqTkxDuhk7D7GSWg+oybrDg="; }; in buildDotnetPackage rec { pname = "kryptor"; version = "4.0.1"; src = "${repo}/src"; }
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Help me to choose encryption software for the different situations. Description inside.
I think depends what be needed, but the main thing is full system encryption. I don't need encrypt single & multiple files, if they are stored on encrypted drive. If I must move them, I can use USB drive encrypted by VeraCrypt. If be needed, I can encrypt all files using Age or Kryptor. Usually Kryptor is recommended more often than Age as I saw, because it's "easier" but I think if something is older could be better, because was more time to detecting errors. 12k vs 1k starts on GitHub is really huge differences in favor of the Age.
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Picocrypt, Kryptor or Hat?
I want to ask about algorithms used in that tools: Picocrypt, Kryptor and Hat. I think which one tools should I chose and when. With my knowledge, theoretically the best option are Picocrypt and Hat, depends on situation.
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Adding a few layers of encryption to a normal file, example TXT could drastically improve security, or can harm in some way?
I tested a few encryption open-source software programs: Picocrypt, hat.sh and Kryptor. I combine it all together, and my TXT file looks now that: hello.pcv.enc.pcv.kryptor.
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Misguided call for a 7-Zip boycott brings attention to FOSS archiving tools
This article is a pretty garbage.
> There is no need to use Git source code management if you don't need it. Git's a complicated tool, which is why Linus Torvalds gave it the name: it's British English for a hostile or uncooperative person. 7-Zip has a single author, Igor Pavlov, and if he doesn't want to use Git, The Reg FOSS desk doesn't blame him.
Who cares if a media desk doesn't know how to use Git. How is that even relevant to the story.
Nobody has said that he should use git, but it is a good idea to use some kind of version control so that changes to the code can be easily tracked, based on change. Places like Github, Gitlab provide plenty of documents.
Using version control also encourages others to contribute. 7-Zip in itself is very old C++ code that I doubt anyone has really looked at too closely in a long time.
Further it often gets recommended as an "encryption tool" when there are better modern alternatives such as Picocrypt https://github.com/HACKERALERT/Picocrypt or Kryptor https://www.kryptor.co.uk.
They later mention that bullshit node-ipc pulled, yet they don't see how version control provides accountability.
Amusing.
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Recent updates to PrivacyGuides.org
You might want to look at Kryptor for something minimal that is actually usable in a reasonable way.
- Show HN: Kryptor – A simple, modern, and secure encryption tool
ChaCha20-BLAKE2b
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Kryptor: A simple, modern, and secure encryption tool.
I see what you mean; https://github.com/samuel-lucas6/ChaCha20-BLAKE2b would be considered borderline rolling your own. Especially when compared to https://github.com/FiloSottile/age/commit/2194f6962c8bb3bca8a55f313d5b9302596b593b as one solution or mitigation to the attack, and considering that it does not seem to a big problem for key based encryption (judging by the comments in that commit).
What are some alternatives?
Picocrypt - A very small, very simple, yet very secure encryption tool.
age - A simple, modern and secure encryption tool (and Go library) with small explicit keys, no config options, and UNIX-style composability.
EncryptPad - Minimalist secure text editor and binary encryptor that implements RFC 4880 Open PGP format: symmetrically encrypted, compressed and integrity protected. The editor can protect files with passwords, key files or both.
orion - Usable, easy and safe pure-Rust crypto
libsodium-core - libsodium for .NET - A secure cryptographic library
sodium_compat - Pure PHP polyfill for ext/sodium
libsodium-doc - Gitbook documentation for libsodium
sodium.cr - Crystal wrapper for the libsodium crypto API
OutlookGoogleCalendarSync - Sync your Outlook and Google calendars
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