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MISER (Multi-point Intelligent Secure Encrypted Relay) is a technology (or rather a blend of technologies) that was developed by TSI to meet the strict security requirements of the TrilogyEC. The combination and implementation of these ideas is at the core of why the TrilogyEC is unrivaled in the market of ultra-secure communications.
TrilogyEC provides true multipoint communication, meaning that several users at different computers can all communicate with each other at the same time.
Each user has their own custom, automatic address book that updates itself without any required action by the user. Every time that you connect with another user, his or her information is entered into your address book, which can be used to make future connections.
TrilogyEC and MISER deliver global awareness without a global awareness server (which is extremely rare). Whenever your buddies are online, the TrilogyEC will notify you. Of course you may choose to keep your status hidden from others.
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All files are compressed before being transferred from TrilogyEC user to TrilogyEC user, maximizing bandwidth. This cuts down on the time required to get critical data from one place to another. TrilogyEC is highly configurable, with many options.
Unlike most IP-based communication programs available today, security was not an afterthought. With MISER, TrilogyEC was designed from the ground up to provide you with complete confidence that the data you send can only be seen by your intended recipients. With features such as secure logins, encrypted individual profiles, encrypted individual address books and user-definable passkeys, TrilogyEC provides no-compromise security.
TrilogyEC provides world class, military grade encryption by passing all communications through an advanced 256-bit AES encryption engine.
The Advanced Encryption Standard (AES) is a National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) specification for the encryption of electronic data. AES is the successor to the older Data Encryption Standard (DES). DES was approved as a Federal standard in 1977 and remained viable until 1998 when a combination of advances in hardware, software, and cryptanalysis theory allowed a DES-encrypted message to be decrypted in 56 hours. Since that time numerous other successful attacks on DES-encrypted data have been made and DES is now considered past its useful lifetime.
Established on May 26, 2002, AES is an iterative, symmetric-key block cipher that can use keys of 128, 192, and 256 bits. The TrilogyEC implementation uses only 256 bit keys. In June of 2003, the National Security Agency's (NSA) Committee on National Security Systems (CNSS) released Policy Number 15 (National Policy on the Use of the Advanced Encryption Standard (AES) to Protect National Security Systems and National Security Information), which contained the following:
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TrilogyEC uses ONLY 256-bit key lengths. With TrilogyEC, encryption goes beyond simple chat. Nearly all data is encrypted, including file transfers, your user profile and address book.
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The TrilogyEC communication platform is "server-less", which means that your TrilogyEC information does not pass through or reside on a server.
Consider this: Most (if not all) currently available multipoint chat applications require a "middleware" server to relay communications from one client to others. This, of course, means that at some point in time, every shred of your valuable data resided on some third-party computer before making its way to your intended recipient. Do you really trust them?
Additionally, that same "middleware" server is very aware of the identity (via IP addresses) of those with whom you communicate.
Not only does the TrilogyEC not have a server, but even the relay code itself is encrypted so it can't be snooped.
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