Because a tech firm ceo doesn't trust the code generating encryption keys he uses the
10% of the Internet Is Encrypted with Lava Lamps - The Mac Observer
This Company Uses a Wall of 100 Lava Lamps to Encrypt Data
Susan Michaels, Author at Lava® Lamp
Encrypting Data with…Lava Lamps?. This month at STEMpowerment Innovation… | by Adwait Ganguly | Medium
Encryption Lava Lamps – San Francisco, California - Atlas Obscura
A Wall of Lava Lamps That Generate Enough Randomness to Help Keep the Internet Secure
Why a Wall Full of Lava Lamps Is a Terrific Random Number Generator
Encryption is groovy: SF tech company CloudFlare uses lava lamps in an unusual way - ABC7 San Francisco
LavaRand in Production: The Nitty-Gritty Technical Details
How do lava lamps help with Internet encryption? | Cloudflare
Mark Pahlow on Twitter: "Lava lamps in the San Francisco Cloudflare office help keep Internet traffic secure. Cloudflare uses a video feed of the lava lamps for the algorithms used to generate
How Your Encryption May Be Depending on a Few Lava Lamps
Groovy! These Lava Lamps Help Encrypt the Internet - Ripley's Believe It or Not!
Brianna Wu on Twitter: "So awesome. It takes pictures of each lamp to generate a random number for 128-bit encryption, making it truly random - not pseudorandom. https://t.co/Ha6hGvoogw" / Twitter
Lava lamps securing the Web?🤷♂️ - The web development company Lzo Media - Senior Backend Developer
Anna Shipitsyna - Datacenter Engineer - Cloudflare | LinkedIn
Info Sec company CloudFlare generates 64 bits of entropy for cryptographic processes with a wall of Lava lamps. : r/interestingasfuck
Encryption Lava Lamps – San Francisco, California - Atlas Obscura