Media Summary: Following a report on the situation with Social Media and bots, Lewis Stuart of University of Nottingham is inspired to see just how ... The Dark web allows users to hide services using TOR, but how? Dr Mike Pound explains. Onion Routing: ... Described as GenAIs greatest flaw, indirect prompt injection is a big problem, Mike Pound from University of Nottingham explains ...

Have You Been Pwned Computerphile - Detailed Analysis & Overview

Following a report on the situation with Social Media and bots, Lewis Stuart of University of Nottingham is inspired to see just how ... The Dark web allows users to hide services using TOR, but how? Dr Mike Pound explains. Onion Routing: ... Described as GenAIs greatest flaw, indirect prompt injection is a big problem, Mike Pound from University of Nottingham explains ... Substitution-permutation networks are the basis for almost all modern symmetric cryptography. Dr Mike Pound explains. Drawing windows and responding to events - what's going on 'under the hood' in your GUI? Dr Steve Bagley. Thanks to David ... Advanced Encryption Standard - Dr Mike Pound explains this ubiquitous encryption technique. n.b in the matrix multiplication ...

Why encrypted group messaging isn't as secure as point to point. Dr Mike Pound explains this ongoing problem. Instant ... Mike talks through a binary search bug that was undiscovered for years! Spies used to meet in the park to exchange code words, now things

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Have You Been Pwned? - Computerphile
Bad Bot Problem - Computerphile
How to Choose a Password - Computerphile
TOR Hidden Services - Computerphile
Generative AI's Greatest Flaw - Computerphile
Almost All Web Encryption Works Like This (SP Networks) - Computerphile
Could We Ban Encryption? - Computerphile
GUI: Under the Hood - Computerphile
AES Explained (Advanced Encryption Standard) - Computerphile
What's Up With Group Messaging? - Computerphile
Bug in Binary Search - Computerphile
Public Key Cryptography - Computerphile
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Have You Been Pwned? - Computerphile

Have You Been Pwned? - Computerphile

Would

Bad Bot Problem - Computerphile

Bad Bot Problem - Computerphile

Following a report on the situation with Social Media and bots, Lewis Stuart of University of Nottingham is inspired to see just how ...

How to Choose a Password - Computerphile

How to Choose a Password - Computerphile

How do

TOR Hidden Services - Computerphile

TOR Hidden Services - Computerphile

The Dark web allows users to hide services using TOR, but how? Dr Mike Pound explains. Onion Routing: ...

Generative AI's Greatest Flaw - Computerphile

Generative AI's Greatest Flaw - Computerphile

Described as GenAIs greatest flaw, indirect prompt injection is a big problem, Mike Pound from University of Nottingham explains ...

Almost All Web Encryption Works Like This (SP Networks) - Computerphile

Almost All Web Encryption Works Like This (SP Networks) - Computerphile

Substitution-permutation networks are the basis for almost all modern symmetric cryptography. Dr Mike Pound explains.

Could We Ban Encryption? - Computerphile

Could We Ban Encryption? - Computerphile

10% off at Squarespace: http://squarespace.com/

GUI: Under the Hood - Computerphile

GUI: Under the Hood - Computerphile

Drawing windows and responding to events - what's going on 'under the hood' in your GUI? Dr Steve Bagley. Thanks to David ...

AES Explained (Advanced Encryption Standard) - Computerphile

AES Explained (Advanced Encryption Standard) - Computerphile

Advanced Encryption Standard - Dr Mike Pound explains this ubiquitous encryption technique. n.b in the matrix multiplication ...

What's Up With Group Messaging? - Computerphile

What's Up With Group Messaging? - Computerphile

Why encrypted group messaging isn't as secure as point to point. Dr Mike Pound explains this ongoing problem. Instant ...

Bug in Binary Search - Computerphile

Bug in Binary Search - Computerphile

Mike talks through a binary search bug that was undiscovered for years! https://www.facebook.com/

Public Key Cryptography - Computerphile

Public Key Cryptography - Computerphile

Spies used to meet in the park to exchange code words, now things