Patents by Inventor Kyle BEBEE

Kyle BEBEE has filed for patents to protect the following inventions. This listing includes patent applications that are pending as well as patents that have already been granted by the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO).

  • Patent number: 12278910
    Abstract: An end-to-end mechanism is disclosed herein for transporting encrypted messages over hypertext transport protocol (HTTP) sent to a group of recipients. In particular, the disclosed mechanism receives a message (e.g., as an input from a user) and encrypts that message using an encryption mechanism with a key unique to a particular user and to the message (e.g., different messages are encrypted using different keys). The encrypted message is then stored in a generated object along with other metadata needed for message processing. Once the object is generated, it is signed and encoded into a binary representation that is then sent to a server. The server system receives the binary representation and decodes it back into the object. The metadata of the object is then used to route the message to the correct recipient applications for decryption.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: October 21, 2022
    Date of Patent: April 15, 2025
    Assignee: SENTRIQS, INC.
    Inventors: Paul Dillon, Kyle Bebee, Damien Fortune, Robert Wilson
  • Publication number: 20230134598
    Abstract: An end-to-end mechanism is disclosed herein for transporting encrypted messages over hypertext transport protocol (HTTP) sent to a group of recipients. In particular, the disclosed mechanism receives a message (e.g., as an input from a user) and encrypts that message using an encryption mechanism with a key unique to a particular user and to the message (e.g., different messages are encrypted using different keys). The encrypted message is then stored in a generated object along with other metadata needed for message processing. Once the object is generated, it is signed and encoded into a binary representation that is then sent to a server. The server system receives the binary representation and decodes it back into the object. The metadata of the object is then used to route the message to the correct recipient applications for decryption.
    Type: Application
    Filed: October 21, 2022
    Publication date: May 4, 2023
    Applicant: Secured Communications, Inc.
    Inventors: Paul DILLON, Kyle BEBEE, Damien FORTUNE, Robert WILSON