Announcement for Mac users: EnScrypt™ 2.0
Download EnScrypt Now
1 week free trial. Registration is $10.00 via PayPal.
EnScrypt 2.0 is a well integrated combination of 3 separate utilities for keeping your data, correspondence and files safe from prying eyes. Using today's most powerful cryptography, the user interface is extremely simple, and the operations are lightning fast.
Requirements: MacOSX 10.4 and later.
Specifications, description and tips:All the instructions for EnScrypt are contained within its easy-to-follow dialogs. A single master password is the only thing you have to memorize. EnScrypt uses the encryption algorithm AES-256, and digital signatures are constructed using SHA-1. Three valuable utilities in one:
- The "Data Wallet" is for managing personal data such as bank account numbers and online IDs and passwords. There are lots of products that do the same thing, but EnScrypt records are freeform text so that your personal and business information is not confined to pre-set formats. No mislabeled and inflexible data fields, and no limit to the size of records. The "Data Wallet" is very fast and never gets in the way. When you need to retrieve something from your database, just copy/paste it. In addition, if you are a user of "Dropbox", "MobileMe" or a similar "cloud" utility, EnScrypt permits you to store your secured data where it is accessible to your other Mac computers.
- The "Secret Correspondence" tool is uncomplicated and unrestricted as to the means of communication. All you need is to establish a shared password with your correspondent, and the program takes care of the rest. When you want to correspond, hand it the text via the Mac's clipboard and EnScrypt returns the translation, whether encrypted or plain, including a digital signature.
- The "Encrypted Files" utility is for those occasions when you cannot risk a file being read by somebody who has access to your computer. Again, the process could not be simpler and faster. Using your master password, files are encrypted, signed and stored as "OriginalFileName.xyz_EnScrypt". To get the original file back again, just reverse the process.
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