Google announced over the weekend that it had taken the OpenSSL codebase, and forked it to create a new project dubbed BoringSSL. In the past, Google had taken OpenSSL and rebased its custom patches ...
As developers continue heir struggles to fix the vulnerabilities within OpenSSL’s crypto library, Google has announced yet another fork of the project based on its own version of the code, amusingly ...
Google is releasing its own independently developed “fork” of OpenSSL, the widely used cryptography library that came to international attention following the Heartbleed vulnerability that threatened ...
Google is working on its own version of OpenSSL, an open-source protocol intended to secure and encrypt the transfer of data across the Internet. The new version -- code name BoringSSL -- from the ...
Google is developing its own version of OpenSSL that will be more appropriate for its own software products, which have been using the critical encryption component for years with customized patches.
Google has exhausted a lot of resources patching up OpenSSL, so much in fact, the company has elected to create its own fork aptly named BoringSSL. Preparing to move the platform to Chrome, Mountain ...
A name like BoringSSL might be more likely to induce somnolence than excitement, but this unobtrusive security update might be just what Google needs to simplify security across dozens of systems. By ...
The latest OpenSSL security hole isn't a bad one as these things go. It's no Heartbleed, Freak, or Logjam. But it's serious enough that, if you're running alpha or beta operating systems, you ...
eSpeaks’ Corey Noles talks with Rob Israch, President of Tipalti, about what it means to lead with Global-First Finance and how companies can build scalable, compliant operations in an increasingly ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. The latest versions of Google Chrome show the company moving aggressively past older, insecure versions of SSL and giving more ...