114 projects tagged "Security"
SourceAFIS is a fingerprint recognition/matching SDK (library), or more generally an Automated Fingerprint Identification System (AFIS). It essentially compares two fingerprints and decides whether they belong to the same person. It can quickly search a large database of registered fingerprints. It comes with an easy-to-use API (pure .NET and Java) plus assorted applications and tools.
freeDiameter is a framework in C for supporting the Diameter Base Protocol (RFC3588). Diameter is a protocol for authentication, authorization, and accounting; it is the successor of RADIUS. Applications can be loaded as modules. Example applications include a Diameter EAP server, a Diameter SIP server, and Diameter Accounting.
CreditCardNanny is a Web browser extension for Google Chrome and Mozilla Firefox that detects forms that otherwise look secure (with a proper and valid SSL certificate, encrypted, and seemingly safe to enter sensitive data such as credit card details) but actually then submit this form data in a cleartext email to the site administrators. This extension detects such forms and warns you of the possibility that sensitive information may be exposed in clear-text, putting you and your sensitive data at risk. You can test the extension by browsing to https://cc-nanny.appspot.com/test-secure-page, a dummy credit card form that uses a form emailer script, a very common pattern used on an alarmingly large number of Web sites.
Passfilter provides you with a terminal that has certain words blacklisted. Upon entering a predefined character sequence (defined as an MD5 sum), the terminal will erase the written characters with backspace, give an error message, and wait until the line is finished with the Enter key. The use case would be to stop you from accidentally entering passwords to IRC or possibly to other hosts, which could be compromised and could be logging your entry.
LibHTP is a security-aware parser for the HTTP protocol and the related bits and pieces. That can mean many things, but the only scenario in which LibHTP has been tested so far is the one when you need to parse a duplex HTTP stream that you have obtained by passively intercepting HTTP traffic. Just feed the raw TCP stream to LibHTP and it will do the rest.
Tools to visualize and process biomechanical data without manufacturer restrictions.