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aes-gcm
About this tag
Discussions on WindowsForum.com about AES-GCM focus on its role in Azure Cloud HSM, where Microsoft uses Marvell LiquidSecurity hardware security modules (HSMs) certified at FIPS 140-3 Level 3. These PCIe-based HSMs support AES-GCM encryption for high-throughput, low-latency cryptographic operations in cloud key management services like Azure Key Vault and Managed HSM. The tag covers the integration of AES-GCM within enterprise-grade, single-tenant HSM clusters, emphasizing hardware acceleration, compliance, and the shift from traditional appliances to dense, card-based HSM-as-a-service at hyperscale.
Microsoft’s decision to standardize Azure Cloud HSM on Marvell’s LiquidSecurity hardware marks a decisive shift in how hyperscalers are architecting cryptographic assurance at cloud scale — pairing FIPS 140‑3 Level 3 certified, host‑attached PCIe HSM modules with a managed, customer‑owned...
Microsoft has expanded a major backend partnership with Marvell: the Marvell LiquidSecurity family of hardware security modules (HSMs will now power Microsoft Azure Cloud HSM in addition to their existing role behind Azure Key Vault and Azure Key Vault Managed HSM. The move extends Marvell’s...
Microsoft has selected Marvell’s LiquidSecurity family of hardware security modules (HSMs) to power its Azure Cloud HSM offering — a move that consolidates Marvell’s role across Azure’s key management portfolio and brings FIPS 140‑3 Level 3‑certified, high‑density PCIe HSMs into Microsoft’s...