I just read about the Stanford Javascript Crypto Library (jsfiddle example) which supports SHA256, AES, and other standard encryption schemes entirely in javascript. The librar
How about local storage? You might want to store some data, but encrypt it so that other users of the computer cannot access it?
For example:
This could be useful in cases where you have a fat client, with lots of (sensitive) data that needs to be used across sessions, where serving the data from the server is infeasible due to size. I can't think of that many instances where this would apply...
It could also be useful in cases where the user of the application generates sensitive data and that data does not need to (or shouldn't) ever be sent to (or stored on) the server.
For an applied example, you could store the user's credit card details locally, encrypted and use JS to auto-enter it into a form. You could have done this by instead storing the data server side, and serving a pre-populated form that way, but with this approach you don't have to store their credit card details on the server (which in some countries, there are strict laws about). Obviously, it's debatable as to whether storing credit card details encrypted on the user's machine is more or less of a security risk than storing it server side.
There's quite probably a better applied example...
I don't know of any existing project which use this technique.
How about for performance improvements over HTTPS, facilitated via password sharing?
For example:
This use case is probably not all that worthwhile, because HTTPS generally has acceptable performance levels, but would help if you need to squeeze out a bit more speed.
Host proof storage. You can encrypt data client side and then send it to the server. The server can store the data and share it, but without knowing the client's private key, it cannot decrypt it. This is thought to be the basis for services such as lastpass.