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RDK Documentation (Open Sourced RDK Components)
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As one anonymous cryptographer involved in Project Hematite told me: "The cloud is just someone else’s computer. The E7 Vault is no one’s computer. It’s a ghost in the machine. And you can't arrest a ghost."
Critics call it "security theater for paranoid billionaires." Supporters call it "the only honest response to a panopticon state." No vault is impregnable. The E7 Vault has two known attack surfaces. e7 vault
Now, a quiet revolution is taking hold in the C-suite and the dark web’s rumor mills alike. It’s called the —and it claims to be the first system designed not for the data of today, but for the threats of the next decade. What is the E7 Vault? At its core, the E7 Vault is a post-quantum, AI-resilient encapsulation protocol . Unlike a traditional encrypted folder or cloud backup, the E7 Vault does not simply "store" data. It sequesters it. As one anonymous cryptographer involved in Project Hematite
To retrieve a file, you don't browse a folder. You issue a "Summons." The network pings the 127 shards; the shards arrive in microseconds, reassemble in volatile RAM, and present the file. The moment you close it, the shards scatter again. There is no cache. There is no temp file. And you can't arrest a ghost
Think of a standard vault as a steel box with a better lock. Think of an E7 Vault as a box that, when someone tries to pick the lock, temporarily erases the box from existence, moves it to a different dimension of the network, and leaves behind a decoy that infects the attacker with a traceable beacon.