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KrelminEncrypt.com (formerly Mach5) Releases
New Version of Kremlin Security Suite
Featuring Military Strength Encryption
Ft. Myers, Florida, June 22, 1998
– Mach5 Software has released a new version of its popular Kremlin Windows
security suite. Kremlin provides a comprehensive security solution, featuring
160 bit military strength encryption, a secure word processor and e-mail
system, and a data sentry that prevents intruders from accessing sensitive
user data.
"Kremlin will protect your data against anyone, be it Big Brother,
your little sister, or a corporate spy" says Mach5 Software President
Mark Rosen, "in fact, Kremlin’s encryption is so strong that if 1
billion computers were each searching 1 billion passwords per second,
it would still take over 10,000,000,000,000 years to decode an encrypted
message. That’s more than the life of the universe!"
"But it’s not hard to use all of this powerful encryption,"
continues Rosen, "with Kremlin, it’s easy to send an encrypted e-mail
to a business associate. And it takes only one click of the mouse to encrypt
your sensitive documents."
However, Rosen is quick to point out that Kremlin is not just an encryption
utility, it is a "security suite" whose features go far beyond
encryption. "Windows was just not designed as a secure operating
system," explains Rosen, "it records your keystrokes, which
might contain an important password or a credit card number, it scatters
pieces of your sensitive documents around your hard disk, and it records
which documents you have most recently accessed. All of this information
is available to any hacker who has the right tools. Kremlin securely wipes
this sensitive data from your computer, preventing any prying eyes from
accessing your data."
By a combination of automatically scheduled security checks, background
encryption, and a secure word processing environment, Kremlin builds a
wall though which no intruder can pass.
‘Mach5 Software, Inc. was founded in May 1997 by Mark Rosen, then a 16
year old junior in high school at the Community School of Naples. Rosen
graduated the valedictorian of his class and will attend the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology in the fall. Mach5 Software has since established
a strong foothold in the security software market with its popular Kremlin
security suite. For more information on Mach5 Software or any of Mach5
Software’s products, visit the Mach5 Software web site at http://www.mach5.com/.’
Addendum: Kremlin is now no longer carried under the name Mach5. For
information on Kremlin, see http://kremlinencrypt.com
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