theprodigalrebel
Lifer
- Oct 4, 2004
- 10,515
- 6
- 81
So bad I think it gave me cancer.Worst thread in the history of Anandtech.
Ugh. So I've used truecrypt on my boot drive for several months. Somehow the PW just fell out of my brain today when I went to turn on my other computer. Looks like I have a 60GB SSD brick. Fuck me.
My first thought was, "Do people really need to store their most fucked-up porn on an SSD?"
Unless one is a superspy or storing the nuclear launch codes, I fail to see the purpose of encrypting an entire hard drive (individual files are another matter).
kiddie porn. he has lots and lots of kiddie porn.
...or perhaps he killed the Lindburg baby and the evidence is on his SSD?
? You can't format over an encrypted drive I thought...
wait....if it's that easy why doesn't the FBI or whomever takes encrypted drives just format over the HDD and recover the data they wrote over?
And mine's encrypted because I have my SNN and tons of financial info on it.
I work in health care, all our HDDs are encrypted in case they are stolen. Lost/stolen encrypted HDD means there's no HIPAA violation.Unless one is a superspy or storing the nuclear launch codes, I fail to see the purpose of encrypting an entire hard drive (individual files are another matter).
If your password isn't 150+ characters they will break into it using a simple backtrace.
wait....if it's that easy why doesn't the FBI or whomever takes encrypted drives just format over the HDD and recover the data they wrote over?
And mine's encrypted because I have my SNN and tons of financial info on it.
If your password isn't 150+ characters they will break into it using a simple backtrace.
wait...so if someone puts the hdd in another computer and moves the files off..they unencrypt?? wtf?
.....ok, so let's say they format the HDD.
Then they use recovery software to get back the data that was there before the format.
They will then have a whole load of encrypted, and therefore still useless, data.
Problem not found.
Encrypting the drive doesn't just put a lock and key on the door, with all the perfectly-ordered data huddled inside, hoping no one breaks the door down.
Encrypting the drive goes into your house, puts everything into a mathematical blender, and then stores the key to putting it all back together into a locked safe. If anyone breaks down the door, they're going to see a horrendous, random mess. If someone burns down the house, and then somehow rebuilds what was in there before, they're going to have that same horrendous, random mess again.
Yeah, you at least need some kind of RAID setup for that stuff, at least 1TB.
I made a GUI interface in Visual Basic to handle this.If your password isn't 150+ characters they will break into it using a simple backtrace.
wait...so if someone puts the hdd in another computer and moves the files off..they unencrypt?? wtf?
wait...so if someone puts the hdd in another computer and moves the files off..they unencrypt?? wtf?
