CipherCloud's website now clearly states, [here](http://blog.ciphercloud.com/responding-to-the-myths-about-cipherclouds-encryption-technology/), that CipherCloud DOES NOT use homomorphic encryption.

This also states that CipherCloud DOES NOT implement 1:1 mapping or ECB mode _in any customer deployment_. Other statements are next to acknowledging that CipherCloud's early demos did that, citing the will to illustrate the functionality, features that where not yet implemented, and necessity to avoid disclosure of technology not yet patented.

I'm also seeing that CipherCloud now "wholeheartedly apologize" for some of the chilling effect of the DMCA takedown notice brought by its legal team.

I'm eager to see a description of the feature more precise than "recognized standard for cloud information protection"; and in particular, for the (reverse-)proxy setup in front of a database application, what kind of restriction (if any) there is on searchability of terms enciphered without 1:1 mapping.

**Update:**

Ciphercloud's FAQ indicates that it does word-by-word encryption to support search. From [the FAQ][1]:

> * How is encrypted data still searchable >

>  CipherCloud provides granular control over the level of encryption and search-ability for specific pieces of information. Data can be encrypted on a per-field or per-word basis with industry standard AES 256-bit encryption. 


  [1]: http://www.ciphercloud.com/encrypt-microsoft-office-365-exchange.aspx