The company hopes OpenTDF will establish a standard for safe, private data sharing. Credit: Thinkstock Data protection provider Virtru is expanding its portfolio of encryption and privacy applications with the launch of its OpenTDF project, an open-source initiative to enable a universal standard for data control. By leveraging OpenTDF, developers can encrypt and protect sensitive data, and incorporate zero trust data control into their applications.Virtru founder and CTO Will Ackerly’s first iteration of the project served as a function within in the U.S. National Security Agency (NSA), and it has also appeared as an open specification that the U.S. Office of the Director of National Intelligence (ODNI) hosted. Over time, the specification of TDF, or Trusted Data Format, has consistently informed efforts to facilitate sharing of sensitive data across disparate domains. Now, with OpenTDF’s launch, developers can access software development kits (SDKs), hosted in the OpenTDF GitHub repo, which simplifies how applications capable of governing sensitive data are built as it navigates through documents, video feeds, IoT sensors, and multi-party analytics.OpenTDF user cases Some use cases for OpenTDF include protecting personal health information (PHI) such as medical histories when sharing with a provider; redacting document content or cryptographically enforcing document redaction that protects words, sentences, or paragraphs of text based on the security rights of those viewing the document; and securing IoT sensor data by providing granular access controls to the packet level while ensuring data integrity. It also offers real-time, end-to-end protection of chat and video conferencing content, and integration with other platforms to secure data event streams from ingestion to consumption. OpenTDF intended to allow private data sharing “Virtru was built on the premise that people should have a basic right to determine what data they share and with whom,” said Virtru CEO John Ackerly. “There should be no back doors and no third-party access requirements. With this open implementation, customers and partners alike can incorporate industry-leading data control standards into their applications. We’re excited to see how developers worldwide will leverage OpenTDF to deliver innovative zero trust data solutions that advance trust and respect for the data their organizations produce and share.”“One of the world’s most important inventions, PDF was created by Adobe to facilitate sharing of documents between people using different computer operating systems, regardless of the application used to create the document,” said Will Ackerly. “Just as PDF helped accelerate digital document sharing, TDF is poised to become the standard method for securely sharing sensitive data. TDF keeps rightful owners in sovereign control of information they share regardless of file type, application of origin, or authentication mechanisms.” Related content opinion Sleuthcon: Cybercrime emerges in Morocco and law enforcement gets creative At this year’s cybercrime-oriented conference Sleuthcon, Morocco emerged as a locus of cybercrime, while UK and US law enforcement highlighted how creative they've become in shaming and disrupting criminal groups. By Cynthia Brumfield Jun 10, 2024 8 mins Advanced Persistent Threats Hacker Groups Government feature AI system poisoning is a growing threat — is your security regime ready? NIST, security leaders warn that hackers will launch more poisoning attacks as artificial intelligence use increases, testing the strength of today’s security programs By Mary K. Pratt Jun 10, 2024 9 mins Cyberattacks Threat and Vulnerability Management Security Practices news Spam blocklist SORBS shuts down after over two decades The service was unsustainable but those in the email deliverability industry expressed mixed feelings about the closure. By Evan Schuman Jun 07, 2024 4 mins Email Security Antispam news analysis New RansomHub ransomware gang has ties to older Knight group File encryption malware used by RansomHub appears to be a modified variant of the Knight ransomware, also known as Cyclops. By Lucian Constantin Jun 07, 2024 4 mins Hacker Groups Ransomware Hacking PODCASTS VIDEOS RESOURCES EVENTS SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER From our editors straight to your inbox Get started by entering your email address below. Please enter a valid email address Subscribe