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Security & Cryptography

AES-256-GCM Encryption

Definition

AES-256-GCM Encryption is a key concept in institutional digital asset infrastructure. All sensitive data and cryptographic keys encrypted at rest using AES-256-GCM across every validator and service.

Why It Matters

Digital asset security is the foundation of institutional trust. A single security breach can result in hundreds of millions in losses and permanent reputational damage. AES-256-GCM Encryption represents a critical component of the multi-layered security approach required for institutional-grade custody.

How JIL Sovereign Addresses This

JIL implements aes-256-gcm encryption as part of its defense-in-depth security architecture. All sensitive data and cryptographic keys encrypted at rest using AES-256-GCM across every validator and service. The platform combines MPC 2-of-3 threshold signing, post-quantum cryptography (Dilithium/Kyber), AES-256-GCM encryption at rest, and hardware security module integration across all 10 mainnet validators.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is aes-256-gcm encryption?

All sensitive data and cryptographic keys encrypted at rest using AES-256-GCM across every validator and service.

Why does aes-256-gcm encryption matter for institutions?

Digital asset security is the foundation of institutional trust. A single security breach can result in hundreds of millions in losses and permanent reputational damage. AES-256-GCM Encryption represents a critical component of the multi-layered secu