Haven't seen it mentioned yet but honestly would say just run with a OPAL or
FIPS 140 compliant SED. As much as folk don't trust NIST those using SED's
certified to those standards are adequate enough for non-classified government
documents (i.e. both NIST and DOD authorize them for use in
On Sun, Aug 17, 2014 at 12:09 AM, Jeffrey Goldberg jeff...@goldmark.org wrote:
On 2014-08-16, at 4:51 PM, David I. Emery d...@dieconsulting.com wrote:
On Sat, Aug 16, 2014 at 04:21:53PM -0500, Christopher Nielsen wrote:
The comment about Apple is simply false. Apple does not have a key to
On 17/08/2014 05:09 am, Jeffrey Goldberg wrote:
On 2014-08-16, at 4:51 PM, David I. Emery d...@dieconsulting.com wrote:
I do think, however, that if there are such backdoors, it would have
to be known to only a very small number of people. Too many of the people
who work on Apple security
Or in the case of OpenSSL, no one notices the backdoor as it is
indistinguishable from an obscure programming error.
On Sun, Aug 17, 2014 at 5:01 AM, ianG i...@iang.org wrote:
On 17/08/2014 05:09 am, Jeffrey Goldberg wrote:
On 2014-08-16, at 4:51 PM, David I. Emery d...@dieconsulting.com
On 17/08/2014 19:39 pm, Ryan Carboni wrote:
Or in the case of OpenSSL, no one notices the backdoor as it is
indistinguishable from an obscure programming error.
The difference between a corporate backdoor and an open source backdoor
is likely that when it is finally discovered, the corporate
On Fri, Aug 15, 2014 at 9:05 PM, Mark Thomas mark00tho...@gmail.com wrote:
any commercial product could be compromised and not completely secure.
Like Apple’s FileVault2, which Apple has a key to.
There aren't known backdoors in FileVault2, or for that mater, Microsoft's
Bitlocker. Apple, on
I just use gpg and armor the file. If its text, there's also a vim plugin
that works perfectly with this method.
On Aug 16, 2014 12:06 AM, Mark Thomas mark00tho...@gmail.com wrote:
I have a question for the group, if I may ask it here and in this manner
(?).
What are you guys using to encrypt
On linux, for full disk encryption, LUKS might be a good choice. Most
distributions nowadays offer a way to turn on full disk encryption when
installing (minus the /boot partition).
For single files I use GnuPG.
regards,
Jonas
On 16.08.2014 06:05, Mark Thomas wrote:
I have a question for the
On Aug 15, 2014 11:06 PM, Mark Thomas mark00tho...@gmail.com wrote:
I have a question for the group, if I may ask it here and in this manner
(?).
What are you guys using to encrypt individual files and folders or even
entire drives like a USB?
I am thinking that:
1. any commercial product
On Sat, Aug 16, 2014 at 04:21:53PM -0500, Christopher Nielsen wrote:
The comment about Apple is simply false. Apple does not have a key to
FileVault2 unless you escrow your key with them. I know this because a dear
friend recently passed, and his family was not able to gain access to his
On Aug 16, 2014, at 14:21 , Christopher Nielsen m4dh4t...@gmail.com wrote:
On Aug 15, 2014 11:06 PM, Mark Thomas mark00tho...@gmail.com wrote:
I have a question for the group, if I may ask it here and in this manner
(?).
What are you guys using to encrypt individual files and folders
On Sat, Aug 16, 2014 at 5:21 PM, Christopher Nielsen
m4dh4t...@gmail.com wrote:
On Aug 15, 2014 11:06 PM, Mark Thomas mark00tho...@gmail.com wrote:
I have a question for the group, if I may ask it here and in this manner
(?).
What are you guys using to encrypt individual files and folders or
We all know that a request from grieving family members or from the United
States Government are answered in ways that the should only be justified for
the other party (i.e.. saying “no to the USG and “yes to the family).
Never the less, I pose the original question again, without the Apple
On Sat, Aug 16, 2014 at 06:26:28PM -0500, Mark Thomas wrote:
Am I on the right track? If so does anyone know of a helpful guide to get
started with OpenSSL on the command line besides the man pages?
last time i checked openssl does no authenticated encryption on the command
line.
--
otr fp:
On 2014-08-16, at 4:51 PM, David I. Emery d...@dieconsulting.com wrote:
On Sat, Aug 16, 2014 at 04:21:53PM -0500, Christopher Nielsen wrote:
The comment about Apple is simply false. Apple does not have a key to
FileVault2 unless you escrow your key with them. I know this because a dear
friend
I have a question for the group, if I may ask it here and in this manner (?).
What are you guys using to encrypt individual files and folders or even entire
drives like a USB?
I am thinking that:
1. any commercial product could be compromised and not completely secure. Like
Apple’s
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