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Data Encryption Standard

nounid 2215·updated May 12, 2026
candidate

Cryptographic algorithm designed for the protection of unclassified data and published by the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) in Federal Information Processing Standard (FIPS) Publication 46. (FIPS 46-3 withdrawn 19 May 2005) See Triple DES.

MWE

Classifications

Entity Type

Control0%rule-basedmulti_axis_classifier_low_confidence.v1

Sensitivity

Regulated90%llm-generatedllm:claude-haiku-4-5

Information Class

70%llm-generatedllm:claude-haiku-4-5

Variants

acronym
DES
plural
Data Encryption Standards
possessive
Data Encryption Standard's
pluralpossessive
Data Encryption Standards'

Framework definitions

SANS Glossary of Security Terms1 senseview framework →
§1
A widely-used method of data encryption using a private (secret) key. There are 72,000,000,000,000,000 (72 quadrillion) or more possible encryption keys that can be used. For each given message, the key is chosen at random from among this enormous number of keys. Like other private key cryptographic methods, both the sender and the receiver must know and use the same private key.
ISACA Cybersecurity Glossary1 senseview framework →
§1
An algorithm for encoding binary data Scope Note: It is a secret key cryptosystem published by the National Bureau of Standards (NBS), the predecessor of the US National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST). DES and its variants has been replaced by the Advanced Encryption Standard (AES)
NISTIR 7298: Glossary of Key Information Security Terms, Revision 21 senseview framework →
§1
Cryptographic algorithm designed for the protection of unclassified data and published by the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) in Federal Information Processing Standard (FIPS) Publication 46. (FIPS 46-3 withdrawn 19 May 2005) See Triple DES.
CNSSI-4009 (Glossary of Information Assurance Terms)1 senseview framework →
§1
Cryptographic algorithm designed for the protection of unclassified data and published by the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) in Federal Information Processing Standard (FIPS) Publication 46. (FIPS 46-3 withdrawn 19 May 2005) See Triple DES.

Outgoing relationships

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Incoming relationships

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