2007
DOI: 10.1080/10658980701784602
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An Empirical Study on the Performance of Java/.Net Cryptographic APIs

Abstract: The unprecedented growing demands on security and privacy protection ushered the proliferation of cryptographic tools. This article presents a study on the performance comparison of cryptographic Application Program Interfaces (APIs) that are implemented for the Java and the .Net frameworks. The results of the study clearly indicate the superiority of a set of commercial cryptographic APIs over its open-source counterpart.

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Cited by 5 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…Our findings on the desktop platform are quite similar with those reported in [3]. However, they are quite different on AES compared to the .NET CF 3.5.…”
Section: Results For Net Framework 35supporting
confidence: 92%
“…Our findings on the desktop platform are quite similar with those reported in [3]. However, they are quite different on AES compared to the .NET CF 3.5.…”
Section: Results For Net Framework 35supporting
confidence: 92%
“…One earlier study (Francia & Riis, 2013) had particular difficulties in studying Spanish teachers: when a survey was conducted, the response rate was below 15% (Francia, 2020). Using another data collection method could increase the chances of acquiring information about Spanish teachers' perspectives, which are largely unknown to date and are invaluable when studying professional development in practice.…”
Section: Data Collection Proceduresmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Scientific studies performed in the past [18]- [21], as well as more contemporary attempts at benchmarking [22] seem to indicate that the performance of Java (and Java EE), as well as C# (and thus ASP.NET and ASP.NET Core) depends on particular tasks they are applied to.…”
Section: B Runtimementioning
confidence: 99%