On Sunday, 22 March 2020 03:00:51 GMT William Kenworthy wrote: > On 22/3/20 2:29 am, Dr Rainer Woitok wrote: > > Dale, > > > > On Saturday, 2020-03-21 13:01:01 -0500, you wrote: > >> ... > >> > >> Thing is, if I > >> > >> give it to someone who uses windoze, can they just put in the password > >> and open it or does it have to be on the original system? > > > > They just have VeraCrypt to be installed and they have to know the cred- > > entials, which may be a password and/or a certain file on each system. > > > >> Basically, I'd like to transfer > >> > >> files from one system to another but it be encrypted while in transit. > >> I use Linux, they use windoze tho. That make sense? > > > > I do exactly that: transfering files from Gentoo to Windows and back. > > And if anybody else would try to read the USB stick they would only find > > white noise on it. > > > > Sincerely, > > > > Rainer > > Good point - securestick leaves the "structure" of directories visible > on the standard exfat FS but encrypts the files in place. My view is its > "good enough" for my purposes and while veracrypt is better - it wont > work in my use case. > > > BillK
I'd like to add the "good enough" encryption requirement Bill mentions here, appropriate to a particular use case should be understood for what it is. A relative measure of security and retention of privacy. Many hardware and software data encryption schemes offer only a relative level of security and are not strong enough to trust them with your life. Convoluted methods using browsers and what not open additional side-channel attack opportunities and increase exposure. Software solutions which work today, may stop working tomorrow on the next release of MSWindows OS. Many hardware solutions promising built-in encryption, well ... they are not to be trusted: https://www.ieee-security.org/TC/SP2019/papers/310.pdf Many of these methods are weak for a determined and technically capable attacker, but they are perfectly adequate stopping the general public from accessing your data.
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