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Systems Programming with C# and .NET

You're reading from   Systems Programming with C# and .NET Building robust system solutions with C# 12 and .NET 8

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jul 2024
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781835082683
Length 474 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Dennis Vroegop Dennis Vroegop
Author Profile Icon Dennis Vroegop
Dennis Vroegop
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Table of Contents (18) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Overview of Systems Programming FREE CHAPTER 2. Chapter 1: The One with the Low-Level Secrets 3. Chapter 2: The One Where Speed Matters 4. Chapter 3: The One with the Memory Games 5. Chapter 4: The One with the Thread Tangles 6. Chapter 5: The One with the Filesystem Chronicles 7. Chapter 6: The One Where Processes Whisper 8. Chapter 7: The One with the Operating System Tango 9. Chapter 8: The One with the Network Navigation 10. Chapter 9: The One with the Hardware Handshakes 11. Chapter 10: The One with the Systems Check-Ups 12. Chapter 11: The One with the Debugging Dances 13. Chapter 12: The One with the Security Safeguards 14. Chapter 13: The One with the Deployment Dramas 15. Chapter 14: The One with the Linux Leaps 16. Index 17. Other Books You May Enjoy

How to transmit network data securely

As we have seen, keeping data sensitive on your machine is hard. But things get even more complicated once we leave the safe haven of the machine we control and venture into the wasteland of networks.

I probably do not have to remind you that you should never use a public website that uses an HTTP connection instead of an HTTPS connection. The “S,” after all, stands for “Secure.” That is what we want – we want our data to be encrypted, and we want to be confident that the server we talk to is secure and belongs to the party we think it belongs to.

The same applies to our code – if we talk to an outside system, we want to ensure that our data is not being tampered with or intercepted. That also applies to other systems when they connect to us – we want to give those users the same sense of security. How do we achieve that? The answer is simple – we do the same as those HTTPS servers....

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