Secure Blue is a type of computer hardware designed by IBM that enables data encryption to be built into a microprocessor. It can be added to existing processors, and encrypts and decrypts data as it passes through them, without requiring any power from the processors themselves. Possible uses of the technology are to protect data on stolen devices and enforcement of digital rights management (DRM).[1]
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| History | |
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| Products | |
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Business entities | |
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| Facilities |
- Towers
- 1250 René-Lévesque, Montreal, QC
- One Atlantic Center, Atlanta, GA
- Software Labs
- Rome Software Lab
- Toronto Software Lab
- IBM Buildings
- 330 North Wabash, Chicago, IL
- Honolulu
- Seattle
- Facilities
- Cambridge Scientific Center
- IBM Hursley
- Canada Head Office Building
- IBM Rochester
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| Initiatives | |
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| Inventions | |
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| Terminology | |
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| CEOs |
- Thomas J. Watson (1914–1956)
- Thomas Watson Jr. (1956–1971)
- T. Vincent Learson (1971–1973)
- Frank T. Cary (1973–1981)
- John R. Opel (1981–1985)
- John Fellows Akers (1985–1993)
- Louis V. Gerstner Jr. (1993–2002)
- Samuel J. Palmisano (2002–2011)
- Ginni Rometty (2012–2020)
- Arvind Krishna (since 2020)
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Board of directors |
- Thomas Buberl
- David Farr
- Alex Gorsky
- Michelle J. Howard
- Arvind Krishna
- Andrew Liveris
- Martha E. Pollack
- Joseph R. Swedish
- Peter R. Voser
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| Other | |
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Commons
Category
Navigational boxes
- FOSS
- Midrange computers
- Operating systems
- Personal computers
- System/360
- System/370
- Typewriters
- Vacuum tube computers
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