| Chris Wysopal Chris Wysopal (also known as Weld Pond) is a computer security expert and CTO of Veracode. He was a member of the high profile hacker think tank the L0pht where he was a vulnerability researcher.Chris Wysopal was born in 1965 in New Haven, Connecticut, his mother an educator and his father an engineer. He attended Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in Troy, New York where he received a bachelor's degree in computer systems and engineering in 1987. Wysopal is married to real estate broker Debra Kavaler. Chris_Wysopal
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| Misnomer Talk:Misnomer
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| TCP congestion avoidance algorithm The TCP uses a network congestion avoidance algorithm that includes various aspects of an additive-increase-multiplicative-decrease (AIMD) scheme, with other schemes such as slow-start in order to achieve congestion avoidance. TCP_congestion_avoidance_algorithm
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| Acid2 Acid2 is a test page published and promoted by the Web Standards Project to expose web page rendering flaws in web browsers and other applications that render HTML. Named after the acid test for gold, it was developed in the spirit of Acid1, a relatively narrow test of compliance with the Cascading Style Sheets 1.0 (CSS1) standard, and was released on April 13, 2005. As with Acid1, an application passes the test if the way it displays the test page matches a reference image. Acid2
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| Card image card image is an archaic term for an ASCII string, usually 80 bytes in length. "Card image" refers to a Punched card. IBM cards were 80 characters in length, UNIVAC cards were 90 characters. A single card typically held single line of text, for example a line of FORTRAN code. Many data formats, such as the FITS image file format, still use card images as basic building blocks -- even though punched cards are now mostly obsolete. Card_image
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| Dynamic Source Routing Dynamic Source Routing (DSR) is a routing protocol for wireless mesh networks. It is similar to AODV in that it forms a route on-demand when a transmitting computer requests one. However, it uses source routing instead of relying on the routing table at each intermediate device. Dynamic_Source_Routing
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| Diameter (protocol) Talk:Diameter_(protocol)
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| Inter-Asterisk eXchange Talk:Inter-Asterisk_eXchange
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| Virtual Private LAN Service Virtual private LAN service (VPLS) is a way to provide Ethernet based multipoint to multipoint communication over IP/MPLS networks. It allows geographically dispersed sites to share an Ethernet broadcast domain by connecting sites through pseudo-wires. The technologies that can be used as pseudo-wire can be Ethernet over MPLS, L2TPv3 or even GRE. There are two IETF standards track RFCs (RFC 4761 and RFC 4762) describing VPLS establishment. Virtual_Private_LAN_Service
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| Atom (standard) Talk:Atom_(standard)
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| Geotagging Geotagging is the process of adding geographical identification metadata to various media such as photographs, video, websites, or RSS feeds and is a form of geospatial metadata. These data usually consist of latitude and longitude coordinates, though they can also include altitude, bearing, accuracy data, and place names. Geotagging
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| IRCX IRCX (Internet Relay Chat eXtensions) is an extension to the IRC protocol developed by Microsoft.IRCX defines ways to use SASL authentication to authenticate securely to the server, channel properties/metadata, multilingual support that can be queried using the enhanced "LISTX" command (to find a channel in your language), an additional user level (so there are three levelsUTF-8 (in nicknames, channel names, and so on). IRCX
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| J Allard Talk:J_Allard
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| LMP LMP may stand for La Musique Populaire, an American indiepop band Laboratory Medicine and Pathobiology, a rigorous and prestigious undergraduate specialist program at the University of Toronto Lampedusa Airport, an airport in Lampedusa, Italy with IATA code LMP Larson-Miller Parameter, prediction of the effects of time and temperature on materials Last Menstrual Period, the first day of the menstrual period prior to conceiving, used to calculated Expected Date of Delivery Le Mans Prototype, a type of custom-built race car intended for sports car racing and endurance racing Licensed Massage Practitioner, Lehet más a politika! LMP
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| Bidirectional Forwarding Detection Bidirectional_Forwarding_Detection
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| ATA over Ethernet ATA over Ethernet (AoE) is a network protocol developed by the Brantley Coile Company, designed for simple, high-performance access of SATA storage devices over Ethernet networks. It gives the possibility to build SANs with low-cost, standard technologies.AoE does not rely on network layers above Ethernet, such as IP and TCP. ATA_over_Ethernet
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| SIGTRAN SIGTRAN is the name given to an Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) working group that produced specifications for a family of protocols that provide reliable datagram service and user layer adaptations for SS7 and ISDN communications protocols. SIGTRAN is logically an extension of the SS7 protocol family. SIGTRAN
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| Tagishsimon/C2 User_talk:Tagishsimon/C2
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| Commercial bandwidth Commercial bandwidth is a term for the regular capacity of the telephone network required for intelligible speech. It was defined as 300 hertz to 3,400 hertz, although the modern PSTN is theoretically capable of transmitting from 0 Hz to 7,000 Hz using ISDN. Commercial_bandwidth
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| Simple Mail Transfer Protocol Talk:Simple_Mail_Transfer_Protocol
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| Extensible Authentication Protocol Talk:Extensible_Authentication_Protocol
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| Quantities of bits Template_talk:Quantities_of_bits
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| MARID MARID was an IETF working group in the applications area tasked to propose standards for E-mail authentication in 2004. acronym of MTA Authorization Records In DNS. MARID
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| AAA protocol In computer security, AAA commonly stands for “authentication, authorization and accounting”. This is a misnomer, and should have been “authentication, access control and accounting”. See below and the Wikipedia article on authorization for an explanation. The AAA is sometimes combined with auditing and accordingly becomes AAAA. AAA_protocol
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| Link Control Protocol Link_Control_Protocol
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| Perfect forward secrecy key-agreement protocol that uses public key cryptography, perfect forward secrecy (or PFS) is the property that ensures that a session key derived from a set of long-term public and private keys will not be compromised if one of the (long-term) private keys is compromised in the future.Forward secrecy has been used as a synonym for perfect forward secrecy , since the term perfect has been controversial in this context. Perfect_forward_secrecy
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| JSON-RPC JSON-RPC is a remote procedure call protocol encoded in JSON. It is a very simple protocol (and very similar to XML-RPC), defining only a handful of data types and commands. In contrast to XML-RPC or SOAP, it allows for bidirectional communication between the service and the client, treating each more like peers and allowing peers to call one another or send notifications to one another. It also allows multiple calls to be sent to a peer which may be answered out of order. JSON-RPC
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| List of Internet Relay Chat commands This is a list of all Internet Relay Chat commands from IETF RFCs 1459 and 2812. In mostly all graphical IRC clients, raw commands must be preceded by a slash ("/"). Angle brackets ("<" and ">") denote what's placed in the encapsulated field, not a literal part of the command. Arguments encapsulated in square brackets (" List_of_Internet_Relay_Chat_commands
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| Certificate server Certificate servers validate, or certify, keys as part of a Public key infrastructure. Keys are strings of text generated from a series of encryption algorithms that allow you to secure communication for a group of users. Many Web servers, such as Microsoft's Internet Information Services (IIS) or Apache's mod_ssl create keys that after having been validated, can be applied to other servers such as News servers or Web servers. Certificate_server
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| Open Shortest Path First Talk:Open_Shortest_Path_First
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| AS2 AS2
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| Certified Server Validation Certified_Server_Validation
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| DomainKeys Talk:DomainKeys
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| Fast retransmit Fast Retransmit is an enhancement to TCP which reduces the time a sender waits before retransmitting a lost segment.A TCP sender uses timers to recognize lost segments. If an acknowledgement is not received for a particular segment within a specified time (a function of the estimated Round-trip delay time), the sender will assume the segment was lost in the network, and will retransmit the segment. Fast_retransmit
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| Comparison of Unicode encodings This article compares Unicode encodings. Two situations are consideredSimple Mail Transfer Protocol that forbid use of byte values that have the high bit set. Originally such prohibitions were to allow for links that used only seven data bits, but they remain in the standards and so software must generate messages that comply with the restrictions. Comparison_of_Unicode_encodings
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| SFlow sFlow is a standard for monitoring computer networks. sFlow specification (RFC 3176) and its first implementation were both launched in 2001. SFlow
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| List of Internet Relay Chat commands Talk:List_of_Internet_Relay_Chat_commands
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| Reverse path filtering Talk:Reverse_path_filtering
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| Frontier Airlines Talk:Frontier_Airlines
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| Jonathan B. Postel Service Award Jonathan B. Postel Service Award is an award named after Jon Postel. The award has been presented every year since 1999 by the Internet Society to "honor a person who has made outstanding contributions in service to the data communications community." The first recipient of the award was Jon Postel himself (posthumously).Vint Cerf as Chairman of the Internet Society and announced in "I remember IANA" published as RFC. Jonathan_B._Postel_Service_Award
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| StrongSwan strongSwan is a complete IPsec implementation for Linux 2.4 and 2.6 kernels.It is a descendant of the FreeS/WAN project, and continues to be released under the GPL license. The project is actively maintained by Andreas SteffenUniversity of Applied Sciences in Rapperswil, Switzerland.authentication mechanisms using X.509 public key certificates and optional secure storage of private keys on smartcards through a standardized PKCS#11 interface. StrongSwan
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| Reliable User Datagram Protocol In computer networking, the Reliable User Datagram Protocol (RUDP) is a transport layer protocol designed at Bell Labs for the Plan 9 operating system. It aims to provide a solution where UDP is too primitive because guaranteed-order packet delivery is desirable, but TCP adds too much complexity/overhead.It extends UDP by adding the following additional features Acknowledgment of received packets Windowing and congestion control Retransmission of lost packets Overbuffering (Faster than real-time streaming) Reliable_User_Datagram_Protocol
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| Jesup User_talk:Jesup
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| IP multicast Talk:IP_multicast
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| Dial-up Internet access Talk:Dial-up_Internet_access
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| IP multicast IP multicast is a method of forwarding IP datagrams to a group of interested receivers. See the article on multicast for a general discussion of this subject - this article is specifically about IP multicast. IP_multicast
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| Route poisoning Route poisoning is a method to prevent routing loops within computer networks. Distance-vector routing protocols in computer networks use route poisoning to indicate to other routers that a route is no longer reachable and should be removed from their routing tables. A variation of route poisoning is split horizon with poison reverse whereby a router sends updates with unreachable hop counts back to the sender for every route received to help prevent routing loops. Route_poisoning
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| Location Information Server The Location Information Server, or LIS is a network node originally defined in the National Emergency Number Association i2 network architecture that addresses the intermediate solution for providing e911 service for users of VoIP telephony. The LIS is the node that determines the location of the VoIP terminal.Beyond the NENA architecture and VoIP, the LIS is capable of providing location information to any IP device within its served access network. Location_Information_Server
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| Traversal Using Relay NAT Traversal_Using_Relay_NAT
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| Source-specific multicast Source-specific multicast (SSM) is a method of delivering multicast packets in which the only packets that are delivered to a receiver are those originating from a specific source address requested by the receiver. By so limiting the source, SSM reduces demands on the network and improves security.SSM requires that the receiver specify the source address, which is possible only in IPv4's IGMPv3 and IPv6's MLDv2. Source-specific_multicast
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