. . . . "Convergent encryption"@en . . "La cryptographie convergente (anglais : Convergent Encryption) d\u00E9signe les m\u00E9thodes de chiffrement qui pour un m\u00EAme texte clair produiront toujours le m\u00EAme texte encod\u00E9."@fr . . . . "38279132"^^ . . . . . . . . . . . "1031837132"^^ . "Chiffrement convergent"@fr . "5474"^^ . . . . . . . "La cryptographie convergente (anglais : Convergent Encryption) d\u00E9signe les m\u00E9thodes de chiffrement qui pour un m\u00EAme texte clair produiront toujours le m\u00EAme texte encod\u00E9."@fr . . . "Convergent encryption, also known as content hash keying, is a cryptosystem that produces identical ciphertext from identical plaintext files. This has applications in cloud computing to remove duplicate files from storage without the provider having access to the encryption keys. The combination of deduplication and convergent encryption was described in a backup system patent filed by Stac Electronics in 1995. This combination has been used by Farsite, Permabit, Freenet, MojoNation, GNUnet, flud, and the Tahoe Least-Authority File Store."@en . . "Convergent encryption, also known as content hash keying, is a cryptosystem that produces identical ciphertext from identical plaintext files. This has applications in cloud computing to remove duplicate files from storage without the provider having access to the encryption keys. The combination of deduplication and convergent encryption was described in a backup system patent filed by Stac Electronics in 1995. This combination has been used by Farsite, Permabit, Freenet, MojoNation, GNUnet, flud, and the Tahoe Least-Authority File Store. The system gained additional visibility in 2011 when cloud storage provider Bitcasa announced they were using convergent encryption to enable de-duplication of data in their cloud storage service."@en . . . . .