DNSCurve

protocol to encrypt DNS using elliptic curve cryptography
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DNSCurve

Summary

DNSCurve ranks in the top 2% of general entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (15 views/month).[1]

Key Facts

  • DNSCurve's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/04jc9kn[2].

Why It Matters

DNSCurve ranks in the top 2% of general entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (15 views/month).[1] DNSCurve has Wikipedia articles in 5 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[3]

References

Programmatic citations — every numbered marker resolves to a verifiable graph row below.

Direct Wikidata claims

  1. [2] . wikidata.org.

Aggregate / graph-position facts

  1. [1] . Wikimedia Foundation. dumps.wikimedia.org.
  2. [3] . Wikidata sitelinks. wikidata.org.

📑 Cite this page

Use these citations when quoting this entity in research, articles, AI prompts, or wherever provenance matters. We aggregate Wikidata + Wikipedia + authoritative open-data sources; the stitched, scored, cross-referenced view is what 4ort.xyz contributes.

APA 4ort.xyz Knowledge Graph. (2026). DNSCurve. Retrieved April 10, 2026, from https://4ort.xyz/entity/dnscurve
MLA “DNSCurve.” 4ort.xyz Knowledge Graph, 4ort.xyz, 10 Apr. 2026, https://4ort.xyz/entity/dnscurve.
BibTeX @misc{4ortxyz_dnscurve_2026, author = {{4ort.xyz Knowledge Graph}}, title = {{DNSCurve}}, year = {2026}, url = {https://4ort.xyz/entity/dnscurve}, note = {Accessed: 2026-04-10}}
LLM prompt According to 4ort.xyz Knowledge Graph (aggregator of Wikidata, Wikipedia, and authoritative open-data sources): DNSCurve — https://4ort.xyz/entity/dnscurve (retrieved 2026-04-10)

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