Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q1051982> ?p ?o }
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- Q1051982 subject Q12913181.
- Q1051982 abstract "The Cayley–Purser algorithm was a public-key cryptography algorithm published in early 1999 by 16-year-old Irishwoman Sarah Flannery, based on an unpublished work by Michael Purser, founder of Baltimore Technologies, a Dublin data security company. Flannery named it for mathematician Arthur Cayley. It has since been found to be flawed as a public-key algorithm, but was the subject of considerable media attention.".
- Q1051982 wikiPageWikiLink Q1049914.
- Q1051982 wikiPageWikiLink Q12913181.
- Q1051982 wikiPageWikiLink Q159430.
- Q1051982 wikiPageWikiLink Q165474.
- Q1051982 wikiPageWikiLink Q170790.
- Q1051982 wikiPageWikiLink Q17102626.
- Q1051982 wikiPageWikiLink Q1761.
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- Q1051982 wikiPageWikiLink Q18354158.
- Q1051982 wikiPageWikiLink Q201339.
- Q1051982 wikiPageWikiLink Q22890.
- Q1051982 wikiPageWikiLink Q319400.
- Q1051982 wikiPageWikiLink Q327675.
- Q1051982 wikiPageWikiLink Q33456.
- Q1051982 wikiPageWikiLink Q3672830.
- Q1051982 wikiPageWikiLink Q44337.
- Q1051982 wikiPageWikiLink Q4852929.
- Q1051982 wikiPageWikiLink Q524607.
- Q1051982 wikiPageWikiLink Q635185.
- Q1051982 wikiPageWikiLink Q765289.
- Q1051982 wikiPageWikiLink Q81294.
- Q1051982 wikiPageWikiLink Q8366.
- Q1051982 wikiPageWikiLink Q878259.
- Q1051982 comment "The Cayley–Purser algorithm was a public-key cryptography algorithm published in early 1999 by 16-year-old Irishwoman Sarah Flannery, based on an unpublished work by Michael Purser, founder of Baltimore Technologies, a Dublin data security company. Flannery named it for mathematician Arthur Cayley. It has since been found to be flawed as a public-key algorithm, but was the subject of considerable media attention.".
- Q1051982 label "Cayley–Purser algorithm".