SAN JOSE, Calif. and NEW YORK, May 07, 2020 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Zoom Video Communications, Inc. (ZM) and Keybase today announced that Zoom has acquired Keybase, a secure messaging and file-sharing ...
is The Verge’s executive editor. He has covered tech, policy, and online creators for over a decade. Zoom has acquired Keybase, an encryption and security service meant to serve as a secure home for ...
A recently released extension for Chrome, developed by the public key crypto database Keybase, brought end-to-end encrypted messaging to several apps this week. A recently released Chrome extension, ...
With their first release, Keybase simplified encrypted file sharing, allowing anyone to securely send data without the need for additional third-party software. Now the company wants to bring that ...
Keybase added to its encrypted tool kit today when it launched Keybase Teams, an open source, Slack-like communications tool with end-to-end encryption. Desktop and mobile versions are available for ...
Keybase has resolved a security flaw in the messaging client that preserved image content in the cache for cleartext viewing. The security-focused end-to-end encrypted chat app, which was acquired by ...
Prominent security experts and systems designers Moxie Marlinspike and Matthew Green both wrote essays a few months apart recently arguing that the venerable message ...
Keybase started off as co-founder and developer Max Krohn’s “hobby project”—a way for people to share PGP keys with a simple username-based lookup. Then Chris Coyne (who also was cofounder of OkCupid ...
Zoom announced this morning that it has acquired Keybase, a startup with encryption expertise. It did not reveal the purchase price. The company has faced a number of security issues in the last ...