And redundant backups are just one more vector to your data. Really, security 
has to be balanced with usability. Absolute security is to never write, type, 
speak  or otherwise store any information you want to protect, or which might 
give clues to any information you want to protect. This is of course absurd. We 
sacrifice some degree of confidence for some degree of usability. I personally 
do not do bit level encryption because of the reason stated below. It's too 
easy to lose everything. But locking down you information as best you can is 
always wise. 

By way of example, I took a phone into Apple where I had the fingerprint 
recognition enabled. The touch screen was intermittent, so I had them replace 
the touch screen. They did of course, first have me disable the fingerprint 
recognition, and turn off Find My iPhone. I got the phone back bricked. They 
had damaged the cable that goes from the security chip to the logic board, and 
now the phone was impossible to restore. The chip marries itself to the board, 
and even replacing the cable would not have solved the problem. Otherwise 
anyone could bypass the security by simply putting a new security chip/cable in 
the phone. 

Yes, too much security is a bad, bad, very bad thing. 

Bob S


> On Jan 3, 2017, at 12:46 , Rick Harrison <harri...@all-auctions.com> wrote:
> 
> Hi Richard,
> 
> Remember that if just one bit/blob on your encrypted hard
> drive becomes unreadable, then you could lose
> everything on that drive.  That makes redundant
> backups over time even more important!
> 
> Have a great secure NewYear!
> 
> Rick
> 
>> 
>> This year I want to take this further. I just turned off automatic login; 
>> next I'll encrypt my home partition. ...
> 
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