Why do you constantly use the term 'True 6144bit'?
Every single character you encrypt a document with urges a potential hacker to go through a certain amount of possibilities to finally figure out which character is the right one. So every character will render a certain depth of encryption. However, the level of encryption of a single character is limited to 6 or 7 bit at the max (read the Analysis page on this website to find out why), regardless what encryption software you use. It's the laws of mathematics nobody can fool with.
Some encryption applications require the user to enter a key entry far shorter than what ShyFile requires and still claim to render an equal depth of encryption, but that's because they simply multiply the characters of the key entry to create a larger one. But doing so will only provide a pseudo high-bit encryption rate. We don't do that. One character will provide 6 bit, and that's it. And 1,024 characters render 6,144 bit (1,024 x 6 = 6,144). This is why ShyFile's max. depth of encryption reaches a true 6144bit depth of encryption (provided a key entry consisting of 1,024 characters is used).
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